Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes says the social networking giant and CEO Mark Zuckerberg have too much power over communications and it’s time to break apart the company.
In a New York Times essay, Hughes makes his case. The essay is blistering to say the least. Two excerpts sum up the break up Facebook argument well.
Facebook co-founder, Chris Hughes argument
“Mark is a good, kind person. But I’m angry that his focus on growth led him to sacrifice security and civility for clicks. I’m disappointed in myself and the early Facebook team for not thinking more about how the News Feed algorithm could change our culture, influence elections and empower nationalist leaders. And I’m worried that Mark has surrounded himself with a team that reinforces his beliefs instead of challenging them.”
The government must hold Mark accountable.
And:
“Because Facebook so dominates social networking, it faces no market-based accountability. This means that every time Facebook messes up, we repeat an exhausting pattern: first outrage, then disappointment and, finally, resignation.”
Facebook co-founder, Chris Hughes
Hughes argues that the government and its antitrust laws are tools we can use today, but it’s unclear Facebook would be considered a monopoly. However, a looming Federal Trade Commission fine is something that could keep Facebook in check.
The argument is that the Department of Justice broke up Standard Oil and AT&T so they could break up tech giants too. But the big question is whether the court system would see Facebook as a monopoly.
Yes, Facebook has its core site, Instagram and WhatsApp, but a monopoly argument could be tough to make. Why? Facebook isn’t essential. It’s not oil and it’s certainly not communication lines. Depending on how you want to argue it, Facebook faces competition everywhere vs. Google, Apple, Amazon and other smaller players.
One of Hughes’ more notable points is that Zuckerberg can tweak Facebook’s algorithms and how we communicate on his own. He has the power of what we see, how we relate to it and to some degree what we think. That’s a bit much for one person.
One big detail would be transparency in algorithms and perhaps a new bureaucracy on algorithm fairness would be formed. This algorithm by regulation would be a disaster if the tech knowhow shown in various Congressional hearings is any indicator.
Privacy regulation
It was telling how Google I/O had the search giant talking about privacy and actually delivering real tools to developers. Facebook talked about turning a big ship with privacy at the center with a whole lot of nada behind it.
It’s clear that there will have to be some kind of privacy regulation and agency to control Facebook’s scale somewhat. But those details are nasty, too. For now, the US is basically outsourcing privacy regulation to the EU since any global company has to comply with things like GDPR.
Add it up and Facebook isn’t likely to sweat Hughes’ call for a breakup. Ironing out just a few of these aforementioned details may take a decade. By then, we’ll all move on to something new.
Edited Source: Zdnet
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