Facebook whistleblower says Congress needs to act to stop a growing crisis

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A data scientist who formerly worked for Facebook testified before Congress on Tuesday, telling lawmakers that the social media platform is harmful to children and fuels political polarization.

Credit: Facebook
Credit: Facebook


Frances Haugen, who revealed herself as the whistleblower behind the leak of a selection of internal Facebook documents, told a Senate panel on Tuesday that lawmakers need to intervene to solve the "crisis" situation created by the social media juggernaut.

"Facebook's products harm children, stoke division and weaken our democracy," Haugen told lawmakers. "The company's leadership knows how to make Facebook and Instagram safer but won't make the necessary changes because they have put their astronomical profits before people."

At Facebook, Haugen served as the company's product manager for civic misinformation. During her time at the Menlo Park firm, Haugen said she repeatedly saw that Facebook "encountered conflicts between its own profits and our safety."

"Facebook consistently resolved those conflicts in favor of its own profits. The result has been a system that amplifies division, extremism and polarization -- and undermining societies around the world," she added.

Haugen also noted that she put herself at risk by coming forward. Although she said she believes she did the right thing, she said she's aware of the fact that Facebook could use its resources and reach to "destroy" her.

"I came forward because I recognized a frightening truth: almost no one outside of Facebook knows what happens inside Facebook," Haugen said in her written remarks. "The company's leadership keeps vital information from the public, the U.S. government, its shareholders, and governments around the world."

At other points during her testimony, Haugen also said that Facebook was under-utilizing its resources to detect underaged users on the platform. Additionally, she said that Facebook's counter-espionage team -- which worked to track Chinese espionage of the country's Uyghur Muslim minority -- is consistently understaffed. She called that a national security concern.

Haugen also put the blame squarely on Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg. She said "the buck stops with Mark," and added that there is "no one currently holding Mark accountable but himself."

She added that Zuckerberg was well-aware of some of the internal research showing the detrimental impacts of Facebook.

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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 11
    Fred257Fred257 Posts: 237member
    Of course Zuckerberg is behind it along with the fake shutdown yesterday to take media coverage off of the whistleblower 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 11
    Looks like a buying opportunity below 300
    applguywatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 11
    "Facebook's products harm children" In my opinion, spot on! Of course rather than yet another (10,000 page) law, a much easier solution is for the parents to: 1 - Not allow their children to use social media. 2 - Lead by example and not use social media. Without all the willing participants in the social media fiasco, there would be no social media.
    williamlondonsbdudemuthuk_vanalingamfotoformatsdw2001Fidonet127watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 11
    sbdudesbdude Posts: 261member
    "Facebook's products harm children" In my opinion, spot on! Of course rather than yet another (10,000 page) law, a much easier solution is for the parents to: 1 - Not allow their children to use social media. 2 - Lead by example and not use social media. Without all the willing participants in the social media fiasco, there would be no social media.

    Precisely this. There is a severe lack of personal responsibility in dealing with social media. It shouldn't be the government's job to tell you to put down the phone, or for facebook to stop breeding hate. Sadly, without personal responsibility, society deems the government responsible for protecting us from ourselves.
    williamlondonmuthuk_vanalingamwatto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 11
    sbdude said:
    "Facebook's products harm children" In my opinion, spot on! Of course rather than yet another (10,000 page) law, a much easier solution is for the parents to: 1 - Not allow their children to use social media. 2 - Lead by example and not use social media. Without all the willing participants in the social media fiasco, there would be no social media.

    Precisely this. There is a severe lack of personal responsibility in dealing with social media. It shouldn't be the government's job to tell you to put down the phone, or for facebook to stop breeding hate. Sadly, without personal responsibility, society deems the government responsible for protecting us from ourselves.
    While I will agree with you 100%, no one under 18 (the age of consent) should be allowed to join anything without their parents/guardians documented affirm consent.

    These social media companies Terms of Service are really contracts and no MINOR can legally enter into or agreed to a lawful contract with written agreement from their parent(s) or guardian(s) written approval. However, social media companies seems to behave as if parents are not responsible for their minors because it is socially acceptable to not seek the parent(s)’ documented approval before allowing minor to venture into the unregulated wilds of social media. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 11
    What a joke she is. An insta-famous FB 'Whistleblower'...on "60-Minutes" of all places. HAHAHAHAAA!!!  Go back to sleep you shameless Media-shill. Come back in another three years and entertain us all again with a brand new 'expose' promoting your ill-conceived Government Censorship agenda over all Social Platforms! :D 
    Everyone thinks they are the next Edward Snowden. :D
    edited October 2021 williamlondon
  • Reply 7 of 11
    My kids are 13 and 15. They do not use Facebook. They laugh at it. Even instagram. It’s Snapchat and f’in tik tok, I think. Regardless, Facebook isn’t even slightly relevant for kids. Trust me, I’m a teacher. Childish adults? Yes. Kids, no. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 11
    PS, the phones are DESTROYING my children and home. It has caused a huge war in my home, my wife could care less what my kids are doing w them and I want to throw them in the trash. If I put screen time on, I’m the evil parent. Divorce imminent. My own mental illness is in jeopardy as a by product of this technology. 
    edited October 2021
  • Reply 9 of 11
    PSS. And btw, I’m a mac wizard, power user whatever you wanna call it. Screen Time is so freaking complicated and my kids run circles around it. 1000 times better when it was just restrictions. I’m done. Shrink tomorrow, thank God!  
    sdw2001watto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 11
    gumashow said:
    My kids are 13 and 15. They do not use Facebook. They laugh at it. Even instagram. It’s Snapchat and f’in tik tok, I think. Regardless, Facebook isn’t even slightly relevant for kids. Trust me, I’m a teacher. Childish adults? Yes. Kids, no. 
    Just queried my sons (11 & 13) who concur:  Instagram, SnapChat and TikTok are what the kids now use.  Very few use Facebook.

    gumashow said:
    PS, the phones are DESTROYING my children and home. It has caused a huge war in my home, my wife could care less what my kids are doing w them and I want to throw them in the trash. If I put screen time on, I’m the evil parent. Divorce imminent. My own mental illness is in jeopardy as a by product of this technology. 
    My wife & I agree on cell phone use and our kids are strictly limited.  All our cell phones stay in a common area and see very little use in the house.  We still have a land-line phone (converted from POTS to VOIP last year) which is used to make and receive phone calls when we are home.  We are definitely NOT anti-technology, but are wary of the potential for harm from some technologies.

    gumashow said:
    PSS. And btw, I’m a mac wizard, power user whatever you wanna call it. Screen Time is so freaking complicated and my kids run circles around it. 1000 times better when it was just restrictions. I’m done. Shrink tomorrow, thank God!  
    Everything in the Apple-verse is too damned complicated these days.  It is one of the primary reasons I see Tim Cook as a poor CEO.  I have heard all the praise about how he improved the manufacturing processes and he might have made a fine COO, but in my opinion he is not a good CEO.
    gumashow
  • Reply 11 of 11
    sdw2001sdw2001 Posts: 18,016member
    The problem with this "whistleblower" is she's nothing of the kind.  She's associated with partisan operatives and lawyers (not that she is one), and is pushing for more restrictions.  The political Left is determined to silence its opposition online, and this is one way to do it.  She goes before Congress, scares the crap out of them, goes on 60 mins, and makes clear that Facebook cannot be trusted to run its own platform.  Facebook, Twitter et al WANT regulation.  They want the government to regulate speech online.  That way, they don't have to worry about pretending to follow "community guidelines."  Think it's bad now with things like election interference and actual medical doctors/scientists being throttled/banned/shadow banned? Just wait until it's the law.  That is the goal here, not protecting children or ensuring freedom of speech consistent with law and order.  

    Want to fix it?  Make targeting children illegal with stiff penalties.  Outlaw viewpoint discrimination and election interference (on the latter...you don't really think Facebook pushes "How to Vote" messages without regard to geography/political affiliation, do you?).   
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
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