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Haugen alleges FB put profit before user safety at UK Parliament hearing

October 26, 2021
Frances Haugen, a former Facebook product manager-turned-whistleblower, at the UK Parliament hearing on Monday.
Frances Haugen, a former Facebook product manager-turned-whistleblower, at the UK Parliament hearing on Monday.

LONDON — Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen alleged the social media giant put profit before user safety while answering questions from the UK parliament's Joint Committee on Monday after she released a cache of internal documents to the public.

Haugen provided evidence for the draft Online Safety Bill that aims to impose stricter regulations on social media platforms. It is Haugen’s second appearance before lawmakers after she testified to the US Congress on Oct. 5, citing internal research documents she secretly copied before leaving her job in Facebook’s civic integrity unit.

During her testimony, Haugen spoke of the “misinformation burden”, Instagram’s impact on teenage girls’ mental health, the desperate need for greater transparency and how algorithmic feeds are driving hate and violence.

“Slowing the platform down, agnostic strategies, human-scale solutions. That’s the direction we need to go,” Haugen said, giving the example of chronological discord servers, where people can break out into different rooms if it gets too crowded.

Haugen alleged that Facebook’s inaction on this was due to the platform putting profit before safety, not wanting to sacrifice its growth.

“Facebook has a strategy of only slowing the platform down once a crisis has begun, rather than as the temperature gets hotter and making the platform safer as it happens”, Haugen said.

Haugen also spoke a lot about the harmfulness of engagement-based ranking and AI-focused systems.

“Facebook never set out to prioritize polarizing content, it just rose as a side effect of priorities it did take,” she said.

Answering questions on the Draft Online Safety Bill, Haugen emphasized the need for greater transparency from social media platforms.

“How will we know when the next danger is looming? Thinking about any tech company that has a large societal impact, we need to be thinking about how we get data out of that company; thinking systematically for large tech companies how we get the information we need to make decisions,” Haugen said.

The Facebook Papers project represents a unique collaboration among 17 American news organizations. Journalists from a variety of newsrooms, large and small, worked together to gain access to thousands of pages of internal company documents obtained by Frances Haugen, the former Facebook product manager-turned-whistleblower.

A separate consortium of European news outlets had access to the same set of documents, and members of both groups began publishing content related to their analysis of the materials at 7 a.m. EDT on Monday, Oct. 25.

That date and time were set by the partner news organizations to give everyone in the consortium an opportunity to fully analyze the documents, report relevant details, and give Facebook’s public relations staff ample time to respond to questions and inquiries raised by that reporting.

Each member of the consortium pursued its own independent reporting on the document contents and their significance. Every member also had the opportunity to attend group briefings to gain information and context about the documents.

The papers themselves are redacted versions of disclosures that Haugen has made over several months to the Securities and Exchange Commission, alleging Facebook was prioritizing profits over safety and hiding its own research from investors and the public.

These complaints cover a range of topics, from its efforts to continue growing its audience, to how its platforms might harm children, to its alleged role in inciting political violence. — Euronews


October 26, 2021
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