Repetita iuvant: Covid-19 made in China? Su cosa indagano i militari russi a Bergamo

 

 

Covid-19 made in China? Su cosa indagano i militari russi a Bergamo

Di Igor Pellicciari -
Covid-19 made in China? Su cosa indagano i militari russi a Bergamo
La missione russa nel Nord Italia ha avuto senz'altro finalità di intelligence, ma non nei confronti dell'Italia. E se la smoking gun contro Pechino si trovasse in una casa di riposo a Bergamo? L'analisi di Igor Pellicciari, professore di Storia delle Relazioni internazionali all'Università di Urbino e alla Luiss Guido Carli

Abbiamo in un precedente articolo su Formiche.net per primi tracciato i motivi degli aiuti russi in Italia,  indicandone tre predominanti, ovvero geopolitico, politico-interno e uno strategico-sanitario.

Una serie di articoli de La Stampa ha mosso il sospetto (adombrato anche da alti vertici Nato) che l’intervento russo sia stato finalizzato a non specificate operazioni di intelligence militare in un Paese dell’alleanza atlantica, con gli aiuti, accusati peraltro di essere in larga parte inutili, a servire da mera copertura e scusa per l’ingresso nel Paese. La Russia si è opposta duramente a questi sospetti.

Senza volere dirimere qui questa accesa polemica, tuttavia rilanciare e elaborare meglio oggi la chiave di lettura strategico-sanitaria da noi proposta a suo tempo può servire a trovare una possibile sintesi tra queste due posizioni opposte e forse farci giungere a nuove importanti deduzioni.

Per prima cosa da chiedersi è perché Mosca abbia inviato un contingente militare e non civile. Da sempre ossessionata dalla difesa da attacchi esterni di un territorio talmente grande da non potere essere presidiato, la Russia ha dagli anni della Guerra Fredda curato una sua risposta a scenari da attacco chimico-batteriologico.

La ricerca russa nel relativo campo è fatta nel settore militare, non per un preciso disegno bellico ma perché in Russia ricade nelle competenze della Difesa, come accade per molti altri settori di cui in Occidente si occupa la ricerca civile.

La seconda domanda da porsi è se è credibile che nel contingente Russo vi siano stati degli operatori di intelligence, in particolare del Gru ovvero del servizio segreto militare di Mosca.

Qui si può azzardare con certezza una affermazione positiva, anche se di per sé è una conclusione quasi scontata per chi sa come funziona l’esercito russo.

È infatti caratteristica comune di un certo modello organizzativo dell’esercito (non solo russo) avere la presenza di membri dell’intelligence a partire dalle proprie unità militari di base, tanto più se si tratta di reparti specializzati in missione all’estero che gestiscono dati sensibili come quelli in oggetto. Esserne sorpresi equivale a meravigliarsi del collegamento all’intelligence di un attaché militare di una qualsiasi ambasciata. Nulla di strano: avviene di default.

Piuttosto, ad essere meno scontata è la risposta a una terza domanda, forse la più importante, ovvero se questo personale di intelligence abbia svolto attività investigativa e, se del caso, su cosa esattamente. Qui obiettivamente le teorie che ipotizzano un intervento di Mosca alla ricerca di non meglio specificati segreti strategici italiani perdono credibilità logica e non offrono riscontri.

Ammesso che vi siano ancora aspetti militari dell’Italia sconosciuti alla intelligence russa, il modo peggiore per raccoglierli sarebbe stato con una missione “allo scoperto” della Difesa.

Dati i buoni rapporti tra i due Paesi, l’Italia è tutt’altro che inaccessibile alla Russia e offre molteplici possibilità di ingresso molto più discrete ed efficaci di un rumoroso arrivo con colonne di camion militari.

Se intelligence vi è stata, è probabile che essa si sia concentrata sullo studio di aspetti della pandemia che potevano essere reperiti solo nella zona del manifestarsi più virulento dei virus al mondo (dopo la Cina): ovvero Bergamo e Brescia.

Del primo aspetto abbiamo già scritto in anteprima mondiale su Formiche.net (senza ricevere smentite) e avrebbe riguardato l’osservare da vicino un’eventuale variazione della sequenza virale per comprenderne in anticipo una possibile mutazione in peggio. Un’informazione di vitale importanza per qualunque Paese, soprattutto se ricevuta con un certo anticipo.

Ma, alla luce del dibattito che sta emergendo tra i virologi sull’origine del virus, vi potrebbe essere un secondo probabile filone di intelligence, di estrema importanza geopolitica, poiché potrebbe ridisegnare gli equilibri mondiali a seconda dei dati che facesse emergere e alle conclusioni di ultima istanza cui potrebbe portare.

Si tratterebbe della possibilità di tracciare l’esatta genesi di un virus di cui nessuno, come di tutte le sciagure del pianeta, vuole rivendicare la paternità. È infatti possibile che i reparti di élite russi altamente specializzati abbiano scelto di andare nel bergamasco per osservare da vicino la primissima versione del virus cinese sbarcato in Europa con tutte le sue caratteristiche originarie, prima che subisse mutazioni o perdesse forza – per trarne informazioni strutturali (come ad esempio il vero tasso di mortalità e contagio) che finora sono mancate in parte perché sconosciute, in parte perché nascoste alla sua fonte, in Cina.

Sono informazioni che, una volta raccolte, potrebbero aiutare a rispondere a una serie di dubbi ancora irrisolti. Primo fra tutti, se il Covid-19 ha avuto una genesi naturale (passaggio spontaneo da animale ad uomo) o artificiale (ed è il risultato – magari involontario – di un esperimento da laboratorio).

È questo uno dei grandi punti interrogativi che ha accompagnato la nascita di questa pandemia e che ha generato un giro vorticoso di fantasiose teorie cospirazioniste che, come spesso accade in questi casi, non si sa se vengano create per accreditare o discreditare delle scomode verità.

Fatto sta che, qualunque sia l’esito della ricerca, essa rappresenta per chi se ne occupa l’occasione di trovarsi tra le mani una “smoking-gun” con un enorme potenziale di impatto negoziale geopolitico, soprattutto nei confronti della Cina, sia nel rilasciarne che nel secretarne i dettagli.

Una dimostrazione oggettiva di un’origine da laboratorio del Covid-19 potrebbe segnare per la Cina un ostacolo politico ed economico insormontabile. Economico perché, scenario senza precedenti, Pechino, pur non avendo perso nessuna guerra, potrebbe trovarsi a dovere pagare i costi di riparazione in un importo impossibile da reggere per nessuna economia al mondo.

Politico, perché si andrebbe a creare una consolidata situazione di relazioni Cina vs Resto del Mondo, cui peraltro alcuni segnali di riavvicinamento tra Mosca e Washington fanno già pensare.

Tutto dipenderà dal mistero se il Covid-19 sia nato in un mercato del pesce o in un laboratorio di Wuhan. E la soluzione potrebbe trovarsi in una casa di riposo di Bergamo.

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Mark Zuckerberg Donated $992.2 Million to Planned Parenthood?

Rumor: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg donated $992.2 million to Planned Parenthood.

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Facts Matter (Nov. 30): Zuckerberg’s $400 Million Election Bid

November 30, 2020 Updated: November 30, 2020

Mark Zuckerberg and his wife donated at least $400 million to a group that has now been accused of contributing to constitutional violations in key battleground states.

What did they do with his money? And what does this mean for our republic?

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How Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook Monetized Fraud

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The Facebook CEO says it’s not his role to become an ‘arbiter of truth.’ Well, his enterprise is now a peddler of lies. What’s he going to do about it?

How Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook Have Monetized Fraud
opinion

Photo Illustration by Sarah Rogers/The Daily Beast

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg got rich by accommodating America’s growing poverty of civility. Plainly put, he has monetized misinformation and fraud.

After a devastating oil spill, the responsible company doesn’t donate billions of dollars to public schools or immigration reform. It cleans up the toxins. Zuckerberg fails to realize his company has facilitated a societal crisis. While his personal philanthropy is admirable, no unrelated charitable ventures will change this stark reality.

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The revelations that Facebook not only sold ads to Russian troll farms seeking to influence voters, and allowed others to target “Jew haters,” clarify its betrayal of human values—turning Facebook into anti-social media in the process.

The new media conglomerate—including Twitter—is the Wild West: unknown, unregulated, unlawful. Users wielding sensationalist or fraudulent stories and cowboys trying to solve terrorism investigations before federal agents are rewarded with ad revenues, clicks, and popular relevance. Many voting Americans are fooled in the process.

These reports are unsurprising; in fact, they are products of how Zuckerberg, and by extension Facebook, sees the world. His declaration in his Nov. 12, 2016 Facebook post, “In my experience, people are good,” is incongruent with present reality. Perhaps he believes we should give ad buyers the benefit of the doubt, since he waited almost a year after the election to determine if they were Russian entities or were purchasing ads targeting people who were interested in the “history of why Jews ruin the world.”

In his Harvard commencement speech, he challenged the next generation “to create a world where every single person has a sense of purpose,” arguing that this was the “key to true happiness.” His thinking is misguided. All humans inherently have purpose, but many times it is the wrong purpose. Neo-Nazis marching through Charlottesville, a sheriff harassing Latinos, a politician stoking hatred, and a foreign adversary tirelessly tampering with free elections—these people all have purpose.

There’s an ideological pattern here. Facebook’s initial mission pledged to “make the world more open,” which it has since revised. Neither purpose nor openness is a virtue in and of itself. Should we be open to racism? Xenophobia? Hate-mongering? Zuckerberg and Facebook both reflect libertarian individualism paired with indifference to values and morality.

According to Pew, 44 percent of adult Americans get their news from Facebook. Zuckerberg has repeatedly dismissed criticism directed at the social network, initially calling the claim that its bungling of fake news tilted the election toward Trump “crazy.” His contentions that “more than 99 percent of what people see [on Facebook] is authentic” and “only a very small amount” is fake are infuriatingly bogus. All evidence proves otherwise.

So far, Zuckerberg’s only allegiance has been to Facebook’s bottom line. And politicians and their campaigns are complicit in exploiting the masses for their own ends. The result is no standard for the integrity of our communications apparatus. Zuckerberg’s deflection is a cop-out. Silicon Valley is often accused of a liberal bias, but recent revelations have provided further evidence that Facebook, far from being an “arbiter of truth,” is happy to disregard principles as long as its quarterly report shows strong ad growth. Whether this is calculated or not is irrelevant—the problem is real all the same, and something needs to change.

When BP or Exxon is responsible for a massive oil spill, they may not want to pay. They file appeals and litigate until they have reduced their culpability to the minimum, but eventually they are forced to contribute to the clean-up. With this latest news, Zuckerberg’s 2016 denialism is no longer viable—Facebook’s culpability is significant and unquestionable. Abstract claims that “people are good” are invalidated by Facebook’s real-life failures.

Zuckerberg should start the clean-up on his own. If he refuses, its users and Americans must demand action, if not from Facebook, from the Federal Communications Commission, which has long abandoned its vital regulatory function. It is high time that we debate anew the scope of its mandate and how to preserve a literate democracy against the treacherous forces of misinformation. We cannot afford the continuous disaster Facebook has wrought.

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ANALYTICS: Who Represents Facebook? A Deep Dive Powered By Docket Alarm


Facebook has been in the news frequently in the last few years, ranging from allegations that the platform does not do enough to protect its users to being accused of biometrics violations, to CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s recent Congressional testimony regarding the tech giant’s allegedly anticompetitive behavior. Several of these events have resulted in litigation for the social media giant. As Facebook has grown into a massive company, and questions continue to be asked about the company’s responsibilities, a select set of law firms have spearheaded Facebook’s representation in federal court. 

The below analysis and accompanying visuals were created by Docket Alarm’s One-Click Analytics and reflect trends in Facebook’s appearances in federal court from January 2019 to September 2020.

The top 10 firms, measured by Docket Alarm’s count of the number of federal civil cases handled from January 2019 to September 2020 are:

  1. Keker & Van Nest; (personal injury, contract, civil rights, fraud)
  2. Hunton Andrews Kurth; (contract and statutory action)
  3. Cooley; (statutory actions, patent, contract)
  4. Pincus Law; (contract, civil rights)
  5. Gibson Dunn & Crutcher; (personal injury, property damage, federal violations)
  6. Covington & Burling; (personal injury and contract)
  7. Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr; (antitrust, fraud, civil rights)
  8. Potter Minton; (patent, personal injury)
  9. Tucker Ellis; (trademark)
  10. Davis Wright Tremaine. (assault, defamation)

The firms represent a variety of practice areas, with some well-known full-service law firms accompanied by more specialized firms, often focusing on intellectual property. Predictably, the suits range from intellectual property, contract, personal injury, civil rights, antitrust, and other statutory actions. The types of suits range from traditional business litigation to the emerging privacy and antitrust litigation.

In all of Facebook’s federal civil suits found on Docket Alarm, Facebook has been a defendant 85 percent of the time, in 141 suits out of 178. 

According to an analysis of the PACER Nature of Suit case types, the largest shares belong to the “Civil Rights-Other” and “Statutory Actions-Other” categories. This is followed by personal injury, contract, patent, and trademark. Lastly, case types such as prisoner matters, copyright, assault and libel, fraud, antitrust, property, and securities are less common. This illustrates the variety of litigation that Facebook has faced since the beginning of 2019, but also shows emerging trends in 2020 as the heightened influence of Facebook is scrutinized. However, while one might expect the number of antitrust suits to be higher in light of recent Congressional scrutiny, the tech giant has only faced five antitrust suits from January 1, 2019, to September 30, 2020. Three out of the five filings were related to each other.

Meanwhile, from 2019 to 2020, Potter Minton has increased the number of cases where it represents Facebook, which is usually patent litigation defense. Pincus Law is another firm that has increased its business with Facebook from 2019 to 2020. 

While most of the firms represent Facebook as the defendant, Hunton Andrews Kurth solely represents Facebook as the plaintiff. Attorney Ann Mortimer is listed as a representative for Facebook in all of these suits, the majority of which are statutory actions, such as a suit for extracting data and collecting likes and another one that harvested user data.

Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr solely represented Facebook as the defendant in antitrust, fraud, and civil rights suits. Most of these suits were filed towards the end of 2019 and into 2020. A large ongoing antitrust suit that the firm has represented Facebook on was brought by Reveal Chat Co. et al., who allege that Facebook used its developer API tools to shut out the competition.

Davis Wright Tremaine solely represented defendant Facebook in cases filed under “assault, libel and slander.” All of these defamation suits were brought against Facebook by the same plaintiff, who claimed that Facebook, Twitter, Apple, and Google were suppressing certain political voices after they were banned from social media platforms.

Covington & Burling represented Facebook frequently in 2020, with most of their suits being filed between March and May 2020. The overwhelming majority of Covington & Burling’s Facebook suits are related to Zoom Video Communications. As Zoom exploded in popularity due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the company faced a large influx of litigation as a result of its privacy and security practices, some of which implicated Facebook.

In 2019, Tucker Ellis represented Facebook in four suits; three out of the four suits were trademark-related and the last was for fraud. Furthermore, Facebook was the plaintiff in all of these suits, which were filed in the Northern District of California. While Tucker Ellis plays a prominent role in Facebook’s 2019 litigation, the firm has yet to represent Facebook in 2020, according to the data. This could be an effect of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Facebook is the defendant in all the suits where it is represented by Keker & Van Nest. These suits cover a wide range of case types, from contract and personal injury to civil rights and statutory actions. Approximately a quarter of the firm’s suits were filed within the past three months.

Most of Facebook’s litigation occurred in the Northern District of California, likely due to the company’s location in Silicon Valley. The judge overseeing the most Facebook cases is Judge Alan Albright, who oversaw almost double the number of suits as the remaining top 5 judges. In particular, Judge Albright mostly oversaw patent suits for Facebook in the Western District of Texas, where Facebook was often the defendant. Judge James Donato of the Northern District of California oversaw a variety of suits, including other personal injury and other statutory actions. Judge Jon Tigar, presided over mostly trademark suits in the Northern District of California. Judge William Orrick oversaw copyright, civil rights, and statutory suits in the Northern District of California, and Judge Cathy Seibel of the Southern District of New York oversaw prisoner rights, civil rights, and trademark suits.

Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, Facebook’s legal work has remained fairly consistent in comparison to recent years, at least when it comes to federal civil suits. For the most part, filings were consistent throughout the time period. However, there were some noticeable trends. For example, in 2020, filings dipped in February, but spiked in March and decreased again in April, although not to February’s level; these fluctuations can likely be attributed to the pandemic.

As may be expected from a tech giant at the forefront of the social media revolution, Facebook faces litigation that reflects current events. There was a large increase in civil rights suits in July 2020 in comparison to any other month; meanwhile, an increase of personal injury suits in April and May 2020 is tied to the aforementioned influx of lawsuits against Zoom.

The analytics in this article are powered by One-Click Analytics from Docket Alarm. To learn more, schedule a demo with the Docket Alarm team.

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“If we don’t create the thing that kills Facebook, someone else will.”

Those are Mark Zuckerberg’s words, in a little red-orange book handed to new Facebook employees, according to reporter Sarah Frier’s award-winning book No Filter: The Inside Story of Instagram. In an excerpt from the book on OneZero, Frier explains how Zuckerberg’s paranoia that Instagram might become the more popular social network drove his decision to acquire it. Yesterday, the FTC and dozens of states filed two antitrust lawsuits against Facebook, with the aim of requiring it to divest WhatsApp and Instagram. The thing that kills Facebook might be created by someone else after all.


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Facebook extends ban on political ads amid misinformation blitz

Facebook says the measure to combat misinformation will continue, even as US state Georgia prepares for Senate run-offs.

Facebook Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a House Financial Services Committee [File: Erin Scott/Reuters]
Facebook Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a House Financial Services Committee [File: Erin Scott/Reuters]

Facebook on Wednesday said its post-election ban on political advertisements would likely last another month, raising concerns from campaigns and groups eager to reach voters for key Georgia races in January that will decide control of the Senate.

The ban, one of Facebook’s measures to combat misinformation and other abuses on its site, was supposed to last about a week but could be extended. Alphabet Inc’s Google also appeared to be sticking with its post-election political ad ban.

Facebook confirmed the extension in a blog post: “The temporary pause for ads about politics and social issues in the US continues to be in place as part of our ongoing efforts to protect the election. Advertisers can expect this to last another month, though there may be an opportunity to resume these ads sooner.”

Baseless claims about the election reverberated around social media this week as President Donald Trump challenged the validity of the outcome, even as state officials reported no significant irregularities and legal experts cautioned he had little chance to overturn Democratic President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

In one Facebook group created on Sunday, which rapidly grew to nearly 400,000 members by Wednesday, members calling for a nationwide recount swapped unfounded accusations about alleged election fraud and state vote counts every few seconds.

A supporter of US President Donald Trump holds a sign during a ‘Stop the Steal’ protest after the 2020 US presidential election was called by the media for Democratic candidate Joe Biden, in front of the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix [Jim Urquhart/Reuters]
Google declined to answer news agency Reuters’ questions about the length of its ad pause, although one advertiser said the company had floated the possibility of extending it through or after December.

A Google spokeswoman previously said the company would lift its ban based on factors such as the time needed for votes to be counted and whether there was civil unrest.

The extensions mean the top two digital advertising behemoths, which together control more than half the market, are not accepting election ads ahead of two hotly contested US Senate runoff races in Georgia, including ads aimed at increasing voter turnout.

The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, along with the Senate campaigns of Georgia Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock, called for an exemption for the Georgia races so they could make voters aware of upcoming deadlines.

“It is driving us absolutely bonkers,” Mark Jablonowski, managing partner of DSPolitical, a digital firm that works with Democratic causes, told Reuters.

Eric Wilson, a Republican digital strategist, told Reuters he thought the companies’ concerns about ads on the election outcome did not require a blanket ban. “This is something that deserves a scalpel and they’re using a rusty ax,” he said.

Facebook Director of Product Management Rob Leathern said the world’s biggest social network lacked “the technical ability in the short term to enable political ads by state or by advertiser”.

The companies declined to say when they would lift other “break-glass” election measures introduced for unpaid posts, like Facebook’s demotions of content that its systems predict may be misinformation.

Facebook spokesman Andy Stone said those emergency measures would not be permanent, but that rollback was “not imminent.”

Google’s YouTube, which is labelling all election-related videos with information about the outcome said it would stick with that approach “as long as it’s necessary”.

The video-sharing company bans “demonstrably false” claims about the election process but has used the tool sparingly, saying hyperbolic statements about a political party “stealing” the election does not violate the policy.

However, Twitter has stopped using its most restrictive election-related warning labels, which hid and limited engagement on violating tweets. Instead, the company is now using lighter-touch labels that “provide additional context,” spokeswoman Katie Rosborough said.

Twitter placed a label reading “this claim about election fraud is disputed” on two of Trump’s tweets Tuesday morning but each was retweeted more than 80,000 times by that evening.

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Biden campaign staffer slams Facebook, claiming it’s ‘shredding the fabric of our democracy’

Key Points
  • A Biden campaign staffer condemned Facebook over its handling of the election aftermath, claiming it is “shredding the fabric of our democracy.”
  • The criticism could be an early indication of President-elect Joe Biden’s approach to the social media platform and even the tech industry at large.

Facebook Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
 
Erin Scott | Reuters
 
A Biden campaign staffer publicly condemned Facebook over its handling of the election aftermath, claiming it is “shredding the fabric of our democracy.”
 
Bill Russo, deputy communications director for the Biden campaign, sent out a series of tweets on Monday criticizing Facebook’s handling of misinformation and some users’ calls for violence related to the election. Russo specifically called out Facebook’s handling of posts by Steve Bannon, a former advisor to President Donald Trump, and the media outlet Bannon previously ran, Breitbart.

The criticism could be an early indication of President-elect Joe Biden’s approach to the social media platform and even the tech industry at-large. Biden has given few hints about how he would handle the long list of concerns around the tech industry, which span from content moderation to antitrust issues.

VIDEO01:00
Former Facebook CSO Alex Stamos on the war on misinformation

The sparse comments Biden has given so far do not bode well for the tech industry and specifically for Facebook.

“No, I’ve never been a fan of Facebook, as you probably know,” he told The New York Times editorial board, according to a transcript published in January. “I’ve never been a big Zuckerberg fan. I think he’s a real problem.”

Biden also told the Times he believed Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects tech platforms from being held liable for their users’ posts, should be “revoked.” That’s a far bolder stance than most lawmakers on ether side of the aisle have stated, given that the law also allows platforms to take down objectionable posts, like those promoting violence or harassment.

Facebook on Monday banned a network of pages linked to Bannon for “artificially boost[ing]” the number of people who would get to see their posts on the platform. A group originally called “Stop the Steal,” which amplified Trump’s baseless claims about election fraud, was among the pages Facebook found to have violated its policies and removed. A Bannon spokesperson did not provide comment on the removals Monday.

According to Russo, the action was too little too late. The group had already exposed thousands of users to the baseless theories, and several more popped up after its removal, he said.

“In the lead-up to this election, we announced new products and policies to reduce the spread of misinformation and the potential for confusion or civil unrest,” a Facebook spokesperson said in a statement. “We built the largest third-party fact-checking network of any platform and they remain actively focused on claims about the election, including conspiracy theories. We changed our products to ensure fewer people see false information and are made aware of it when they do, and highlighted reliable election information where nearly everyone on Facebook and Instagram saw that Vice President Biden was the projected winner of the U.S. election.”

Russo also criticized Facebook for maintaining Bannon’s page on its platform after Bannon called for the beheading of government infectious diseases-expert Dr. Anthony Fauci and FBI Director Christopher Wray during a podcast. Twitter suspended the podcast from its platform and Google-owned YouTube took down the episode.

After Bannon released the episode, his lawyers defending him on charges that he defrauded donors to a nonprofit sought to be released from his case.

Russo contrasted Facebook’s approach to election misinformation with Twitter’s, which has more aggressive policies for labeling potentially misleading information. He claimed that while Twitter prevented election misinformation from Trump from being spread widely, “Facebook continued to actively promote the posts in feeds.”

Russo said in a tweet that the campaign had “pleaded with Facebook for over a year to be serious about these problems. They have not.”

The messages signal Facebook is likely to face continued scrutiny under the Biden administration. The company has been under investigation by the Federal Trade Commission and a coalition of states over antitrust concerns for well over a year. The federal agency could bring charges against Facebook as soon as this month, according to Politico.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

WATCH: Here’s why some experts are calling for a breakup of Big Tech after the House antitrust report

VIDEO02:34

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 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxMElunk_2I&t=476s

QUESTO SONO I SANTONI DELLA CENSURA UNIVERSALE: CHIAGNENE E VI FOTTONO DALLA MATTINA ALLA SERA

 

Mark Zuckerberg’s $300 million donation to protect elections must overcome Facebook’s past

One of Zuckerberg’s largest-ever gifts became an immediate flashpoint in the debate over billionaire philanthropy.

Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan at the White House in 2015.
Molly Riley/AFP via Getty Images

Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, are donating $300 million to protect American elections. It is one of the couple’s largest-ever single gifts, meant to bolster democracy during a pandemic. But it’s also one that critics say is brimming with irony given Facebook’s past failures in protecting the integrity of elections.

The Facebook chief said on Tuesday that he had sent the money to two civic organizations which in turn will direct it to state and local election officials so they can prepare for an unprecedented Election Day. The coronavirus pandemic has caused many states to radically shift — on short notice — how they will administer elections to ensure safety. A majority of Americans say they are anticipating that they will vote early or by mail this year.

The majority of the gift, $250 million, will go to the Center for Tech and Civic Life, a nonprofit popular with many tech philanthropists, which will then regrant the money to local election officials so they can recruit poll workers, supply them with personal protective equipment, and set up drive-through voting. Another $50 million heads to the Center for Election Innovation & Research to be distributed to Secretaries of State across the country.

The money does not come from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, their joint philanthropy, but is a personal donation.

“Election officials across the country are working hard to ensure that everyone can vote and every vote can be counted,” Zuckerberg said, “and we want to help make sure they have the resources they need to do this.”

And while the money may be sorely needed, the announcement of the gift on Tuesday emerged as an immediate flashpoint in the simmering debate over billionaire philanthropy and whether donations are the best way to enact change. That’s because, to many on the left and to Facebook critics more broadly, it is Zuckerberg’s company that has harmed democracy by tolerating hate speech, failing to curtail disinformation, or allowing Russian operatives to mess with the 2016 election.

The fact that this criticism even exists is revealing. In an earlier era, a huge donation from Zuckerberg might be greeted with whoops and hollers, like his famous $100 million gift to Newark schools a decade ago. Even the creation of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, just dating back to 2015, was largely a PR win for the couple.

But in today’s America, where Zuckerberg is a pariah to many progressives and where billionaire gifts are scrutinized much more closely, the reaction was more complicated.

Here’s Raffi Krikorian, who has long worked at the intersection of tech and politics:

And here’s Tara McGowan, the head of one of the Democratic Party’s largest outside groups that has raised big money from Silicon Valley donors:

Facebook has stressed that it has learned the lessons from 2016 and is arguing that it is much better prepared for this fall. Alongside the announcement of the gift — and perhaps with an eye to this predictable criticism — Zuckerberg pointed out Facebook’s pledge to register 4 million voters and promote information on matters like vote-by-mail to its users.

Election officials were nevertheless ecstatic about the gift. Michigan’s secretary of state called it a “game changer.” Ohio’s said the money would “go a long way” to ensuring the public’s confidence in the vote.

But as always, two things can be true at once about billionaire philanthropy: The money may indeed fill an urgent gap that makes our lives better, but giving away these large sums represents a relatively minor component in the total assessment of how each billionaire is shaping our world.

QUESTO SONO I SANTONI DELLA CENSURA UNIVERSALE: CHIAGNENE E VI FOTTONO DALLA MATTINA ALLA SERA

 

The First Amendment has a Facebook problem

Big Tech poses an enormous challenge to free speech — but we aren’t having the right debate about it.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg sitting at a desk and wearing a suit and tie for his testimony before Congress in 2018. The room behind him is packed with seated people.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies at a joint hearing of the Senate Judiciary and Commerce committees on Capitol Hill on April 10, 2018. 
Xinhua/Ting Shen/Getty Images

Editor’s note, May 5, 2021: On Wednesday, a Facebook oversight board ruled that the social media service could retain its ban on former President Donald Trump following the insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6. The board also stated, however, that Facebook would need to either justify a permanent ban or eventually restore Trump’s account. The following conversation, which took place on April 20, addresses some of the deeper issues raised by Facebook’s ban.


America’s commitment to free speech is uniquely radical.

The US Constitution treats freedom of expression as the master freedom that makes every other possible. And our legal system reflects this view, which is why it has always been incredibly difficult to suppress or punish speech in this country.

But there has never been a consensus on how to implement the First Amendment. Free speech law has evolved a ton over the years, especially in the aftermath of revolutions in media technology. The birth of radio and television, for example, altered the information landscape, creating new platforms for speech and new regulatory hurdles.

Today, the big challenge is the internet and the many ways it has transformed the public square. In fact, if a public square exists at all anymore, it’s virtual. And that’s problematic because our communication platforms are controlled by a handful of tech companies — Twitter, Facebook, Google, and Amazon.

So what happens when companies like Facebook and Twitter decide, as they did in the aftermath of the insurrection on January 6, to ban the president of the United States for “glorifying violence” and spreading dangerous misinformation about the election? Is that a violation of the First Amendment?

The conventional response is no: Facebook and Twitter are private companies, free to do whatever they want with their platforms. That’s not wrong, but it is oversimplified. If the public square is controlled by a few private companies and they have the power to collectively ban citizens whenever they want, then doesn’t that give them the ability to effectively deny constitutionally protected liberties?

There are no simple answers to these questions, so I reached out to Genevieve Lakier, a law professor at the University of Chicago and an expert on the history of the First Amendment, to explore some of the tensions. Lakier believes our current debate about deplatforming — and free speech more generally — is too hollow.

We talk about why contemporary First Amendment law is poorly equipped to handle threats to speech in the internet era, why we don’t want tech CEOs arbitrarily policing speech, what it means to have private control of the mass public sphere, and what, if anything, we can do on the policy front to deal with all of these challenges.

A lightly edited transcript of our conversation follows.

Sean Illing

What does the law actually say about the right of private companies like Twitter or Facebook to censor or ban users at will? Is it legal?

Genevieve Lakier

It is definitely legal. The First Amendment imposes very strict non-discrimination duties on government actors. So the government isn’t allowed to ban speech just because it wants to ban speech. There’s only going to be a limited set of cases in which it’s allowed to do that.

But the First Amendment only limits government actors, and no matter how powerful they are under current rules, Facebook, Amazon, and Twitter are not going to be considered government actors. So constitutionally they have total freedom to do whatever they want with the speech on their platforms.

The only caveat here is that they can’t permit unlawful speech on their platforms, like child pornography or speech that violates copyright protections or speech that’s intended to communicate a serious threat or incite violence. Bun in those cases, it’s not the tech companies making the decision, it’s the courts.

Sean Illing

So why do you believe that our current legal framework is inadequate for dealing with free speech and tech platforms?

Genevieve Lakier

It’s inadequate because it rests on a false understanding of the speech marketplace. The best explanation for why we have a strict state action restriction on the scope of the First Amendment is the government is a regulator of the speech marketplace, so we want to limit its ability to kick anyone out of the marketplace of ideas.

Ideally, we want to give people who participate in the marketplace of ideas a lot of freedom to discriminate when it comes to speech because that’s how the marketplace of ideas separates good ideas from bad ideas. You couldn’t have an effective marketplace of ideas if people couldn’t decide which ideas they want to associate with and which ideas they don’t.

And that makes sense at a certain level of abstraction. But the world we live in is not the one where the government is the only governor of the marketplace of ideas. The whole public-private distinction doesn’t really map onto the world of today. If that was the world we lived in, the current rules would work fantastically. But as the platforms make clear, private actors very often are themselves governors of the marketplace of ideas. They’re dictating who can speak and how they may speak.

Facebook and Twitter are not government actors, they don’t have an army, you can leave them much more easily than you can leave the United States. But when it comes to the regulation of speech, all the concerns that we have about government censorship — that it’s going to limit diversity of expression, that it’s going to manipulate public opinion, that it’s going to target dissident or heterodox voices — also apply to these massive private actors, yet under the current First Amendment rules there is no mechanism to protect against those harms.

Sean Illing

I absolutely don’t want Mark Zuckerberg or Jack Dorsey or John Roberts deciding what kind of speech is permissible, but the reality is that these tech platforms are guided by perverse incentives and they do promote harmful speech and dangerous misinformation and that does have real-world consequences.

But if we want a truly open and free society, are those just risks we have to live with?

Genevieve Lakier

To some degree, yes. People love to talk about free speech as an unadulterated good, but the truth is that the commitment to free speech has always meant a commitment to allowing harmful speech to circulate. Free speech means little if it only means protection for speech that we don’t think is objectionable or harmful. So yeah, a society organized on the principle of free speech is going to have to tolerate harmful speech.

But that doesn’t mean that we have to tolerate all harmful speech, or that we can’t do anything to protect ourselves against harassment or threats or violent speech. Right now we have what’s widely seen as a crisis of speech moderation on these platforms. The platforms themselves are responding through effective self-regulation. But those efforts are always going to be guided by the profit motive, so I’m skeptical about how far that’s going to get us when it comes to sustainable speech moderation policies.

Sean Illing

Do you want the government telling Zuckerberg or Dorsey how to moderate content?

Genevieve Lakier

We might, as democratic citizens, think that our democratic government should have something to say about the speech that flows through the platforms. That doesn’t necessarily mean that we want Congress telling Jack Dorsey or Mark Zuckerberg what speech they may or may not allow. There’s a tremendous amount of disagreement about what’s harmful speech, or where to draw the lines, and you might not think Congress is in a good position to make those kinds of decisions.

Perhaps we want a diversity of approaches to content moderation across the platforms, and the government establishing a uniform speech code would undermine that. But at the same time the platforms are governors of speech, they’re the regulators of incredibly important forums of mass communication. And so I, as a democratic citizen who thinks the free speech principle is intended to facilitate democratic ends, want there to be more democratic oversight of what happens on the speech platforms.

Sean Illing

That sounds perfectly reasonable in the abstract, but what would “democratic oversight” look like in practice?

Genevieve Lakier

One way is to mandate transparency. To require the platforms to give more information to the public, to researchers, to the government, about how they’re making content moderation decisions, so ordinary citizens can assess if it’s good or bad, or what the effects of the policies are. That’s tricky because you’d have to think about what kind of information the platforms should be required to give and whether or not it would offer us any real insight. But I do think there’s a role for transparency here.

Alternatively, if we recognize that these private actors are playing such a tremendously important role in our public life, we could think about ways to make their decision-making more democratic or more democratically legitimate. So there have been proposals to create a kind of regulatory agency that would potentially collaborate with some of the platforms on developing policies. That might create more democratic structures of governance inside these platforms.

Sean Illing

What do you make of Justice Clarence Thomas’s recent suggestion that we should consider treating tech platforms like “common carriers” and regulate them like public utilities? Is that a good idea?

Genevieve Lakier

This is an idea that people on both the left and the right have suggested in recent years, but that had always been viewed as very constitutionally problematic. So it’s interesting that Justice Thomas thinks a common carrier platform law would be constitutional.

Practically, it’s hard to see how a common carrier regime would work. Common carrier laws— which prevent private actors from excluding almost any speech — work well when applied to companies whose job primarily is moving speech from one place to another. But the social media companies do a lot more than that: one of the primary benefits they provide to their users is by moderating content, to facilitate conversation, to flag news or videos as relevant, etc.

Common carrier obligations would make it difficult for the companies to perform this service, so the common carrier analogy doesn’t really work. Justice Thomas also suggested the possibility of subjecting the platforms to public accommodations law. Now, that seems more viable, because public accommodations law doesn’t prevent private companies from denying service to customers altogether, it merely limits the bases on which they could do so.

Sean Illing

Going back to your point about transparency, even if a company like Twitter formulated what most people might consider transparent and responsible speech policies (which I doubt, but let’s just grant that possibility), I don’t see any way to enforce it consistently over time. There is just too much ambiguity and the boundaries between free and harmful speech are impossible to define, much less police.

Genevieve Lakier

Regulation of speech is always tricky, and the scale of the speech and the transnational scope of these platforms creates enormous challenges. The best we can do is to try and develop mechanisms, appeals, processes, reviews, and transparency obligations where the platform’s disclosing what it’s doing and how it’s doing it. I think that’s the best we can do. It won’t be perfect, but it would be good to get to a system where we have some reason to believe that the decision-making is not ad hoc and totally discretionary.

Sean Illing

Are there free speech models around the world that the US could follow or replicate? A country like Germany, for example, isn’t comfortable with private companies deplatforming citizens, so they passed a law in 2017 restricting online incitement and hate speech.

Is there any room for an approach like that in the US?

Genevieve Lakier

The First Amendment makes it extremely difficult for the government to require platforms to take down speech that doesn’t fall into some very narrow categories. Again, incitement is one of those categories, but it is defined very narrowly in the cases to mean only speech that is intended, and likely, to lead to violence or lawbreaking. Hate speech is not one of those categories. That means that Congress could make it a crime to engage in incitement on the platforms but that would apply only to a very limited range of speech.

Sean Illing

I know you believe the platforms were justified in banning Trump after the assault on the Capitol in January, but do you also believe that we should punish or censor public officials for lying or perpetrating frauds on the public?

Genevieve Lakier

I think politicians should be able to be punished for lies, but I also think it’s very dangerous because the distinction between truth and lies is often difficult or subjective, and obviously democratic politics involves a lot of exaggeration and hyperbole and things that skirt the line between truth and lying. So we wouldn’t want a rule that allows whoever’s in power to silence their enemies or critics.

But on the other hand, we already prosecute all kinds of lies. We prosecute fraud, for instance. When someone lies to you to get a material benefit, they can go to jail. When prosecuted, the fact that you used speech to effectuate that fraudulent end is not a defense. As a subspecies of this, we criminalize election fraud. So if someone lies to you about the location of a polling place or they give you intentionally incorrect information about how to vote, they can go to prison.

Political lies that constitute fraud or that contribute to confusion about an election are in a narrow category of their own. So for example, I think President Trump’s lies about the outcome of the election are a species of election fraud. When used to achieve material benefit or electoral benefit where he’s going to use those lies in order to justify staying in power, that feels like the kind of lie that perhaps we want to include in our election fraud category.

Sean Illing

I just can’t imagine political speech, which is very different from commercial speech, ever being controlled that way. A border case like Trump inciting violence might be as clear-cut as it gets, but what about propaganda? Sophistry? And the innumerable forms of bullshit that have always constituted democratic politics? Democracy is a contest of persuasion and politicians and parties are always going to deceive and manipulate in pursuit of power and money.

That’s just baked into the democratic cake, right?

Genevieve Lakier

So I agree that there’s a category we could call election fraud that maybe we feel okay prosecuting and then there’s ordinary political bullshit that maybe we don’t. But I’m going to throw a question back at you, because I think that there are cases on the border that are really difficult. For example, what about the lies that Trump told his supporters in order to keep contributing to his fund after the election?

To me, that looks like fraud. If it wasn’t a politician, we would just call it classic fraud. But in the political domain, we call it something else. I’m not entirely sure about to think about this, but it’s an interesting case.

Sean Illing

Oh, no doubt it’s fraudulent, but I guess my point is that a great deal of politics is fraudulent in the same way, though it’s usually less overt than Trump’s hucksterism. Parties and politicians and special interest groups lie and peddle half-truths all the time. There’s so much bullshit in our political system that Trump appealed to a lot of people precisely because he was so transparently full of shit, which says quite a bit about where we’re at. The idea that we could ever meaningfully punish lying strikes me as fantastical.

Genevieve Lakier

What’s so interesting is that when you look at commercial speech cases, it’s not even controversial to prosecute false advertising. There’s no debate that false advertising is outside the scope of First Amendment protection.

The justification for that is often that the person who’s selling you the commercial good has information about the good that the consumer doesn’t have and cannot get, so if they tell you it will cure bad breath or whatever, you have to trust them. When there’s a clear imbalance in knowledge and access between the speaker and the listener, the court says it’s okay to prosecute lying.

One approach I’ve thought about, though I’m not sure it would work, is when a politician is lying about something that the member of the public has no way of checking or verifying either on their own or through public sources.

One of the reasons that the lies about the election were so damaging is because the people who were listening to those lies, they didn’t have any way of knowing whether this was or was not happening. I suppose they did though, they could rely on other news sources. But it was very difficult for them to verify what was happening in the black box of the election machinery.

So yeah, I agree that lying is an intrinsic part of democratic politics, but I also think that there are certain kinds of lies that are very difficult to respond to just through the ordinary marketplace of ideas. A huge challenge moving forward will be navigating these kinds of questions in a rapidly changing landscape.

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