Yesterday, Facebook employees issued an open letter urging Mark Zuckerberg and other company executives at the tech giant to rethink their strategy for regulating and green-lighting paid political ads on the platform. The open letter, obtained by The New York Times, has been signed by more than 250 employees who believe the platform is being weaponized by politicians and threatens what the company stands for — allowing people to express their voice. “Misinformation affects us all. Our current policies on fact checking people in political office, or those running for office, are a threat to what FB stands for. We strongly object to this policy as it stands. It doesn’t protect voices, but instead allows politicians to weaponize our platform by targeting people who believe that content posted by political figures is trustworthy.”
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) October 28, 2019 Since the Cambridge Analytica Scandal last year, where 50 million profiles had their data breached, Facebook’s reputation plummeted resulting in a wave of global distrust. Employees of Facebook believe the social network’s stance on political ads will only further add to this: “Allowing paid civic misinformation to run on the platform in its current state has the potential to increase distrust in our platform by allowing similar paid and organic content to sit side-by-side — some with third-party fact-checking and some without. Additionally, it communicates that we are OK profiting from deliberate misinformation campaigns by those in or seeking positions of power.” The letter offered the social network ‘proposals for improvement,’ including: hold political ads to the same standards as other ads, restrict audience targeting for political ads, and provide a stronger visual design for political ads. According to Facebook, they’ve “made significant investments since 2016 to reduce the spread of viral misinformation and fake accounts.” This comes after a study by the Oxford Internet Institute found that since 2017, organized social media manipulation has more than doubled with at least 70 countries known to be using online propaganda to manipulate mass public opinion, and in some cases, on a global scale. Despite there being more social media platforms than ever, Facebook remains the most popular choice for online manipulation with propaganda campaigns found on the platform in 56 countries. With election campaigns being directly affected by technological advances,, social platforms like Facebook must take responsibility for preventing the spread of misinformation. While the number of signatures on the open letter represents just a fraction of Facebook’s overall 35,000-plus workforce, the action taken by the tech giant’s employees is a rare sign of resistance against the corporation.