Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Zuckerberg slammed over coronavirus hoaxes: ‘You can’t contain deadly content’

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) accused CEO Mark Zuckerberg of allowing coronavirus hoaxes and misinformation to spread on Facebook because it’s “engaging” and “good for business” during an intense clash at Wednesday’s House Judiciary Committee antitrust hearing on Big Tech.

Recommended Videos

“The more engagement there is, the more money you make,” said Cicilline, who chairs the Judiciary Committee’s antitrust subcommittee, on the topic of Facebook’s incentive to leave up content that may be harmful — like the rapid spread of coronavirus misinformation currently making waves across the social media platform.

Cicilline listed some of the top posts on Facebook this year, which included a quote from President Donald Trump claiming that injecting disinfectant can clean the lungs, and how the coronavirus pandemic is a political hoax. He also referenced a widespread conspiracy theory video that falsely claimed hydroxychloroquine is an effective cure for the coronavirus and that face masks do not stop the spread of COVID-19. The video gained more than 20 million views before Facebook took it down.

“During the biggest public health crisis of our lifetime, don’t you agree that these articles viewed by millions on your platform will cost lives?” asked Cicilline. “Doesn’t that suggest, Mr. Zuckerberg, that your platform is so big that even with the right policies in place, you can’t contain deadly content?”

“Well congressman, a lot of people shared that,” Zuckerberg said of the video. “I think we have a responsibility to limit the spread of content that we think is going to be harmful.”

Wednesday’s hearing was supposed to be focused on antitrust issues within Big Tech, but Facebook’s historic “hands-off” approach when it comes to moderating content got considerable screen time. Facebook has been known to defend its position to leave up posts that have spread misinformation or provoked violence. In June, Facebook came under fire from critics for leaving up a post by President Trump that glorified violence against Black Lives Matter protesters, a move Zuckerberg defended, which led to a large advertising boycott throughout July.

Zuckerberg said Wednesday that he believes Facebook has been doing a good job at moderating misinformation on the platform during the spread of COVID-19 by uplifting authoritative resources, like referencing people to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as well as the World Health Organization, for more information.

However, lately, coronavirus misinformation has been running rampant through the platform, thanks to conspiracy theory groups like QAnon. In May, a misinformation-filled documentary entitled “Plandemic” made waves on Facebook, and it took nearly a week before the social media platform took it down.

Meira Gebel
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Meira Gebel is a freelance reporter based in Portland. She writes about tech, social media, and internet culture for Digital…
Social media ban for young users is proving to be an age verification nightmare
A fake birthday is enough to beat Australia's social media ban on teens.
Social media apps on smartphone

Australia’s world-first teen social media ban was supposed to keep children under 16 away from popular platforms, including Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, and X. While this was a major controversial change, it appears that getting around it was barely even a challenge.

Researchers created 50 test accounts across nine of the ten platforms covered by the law. Each account claimed its user was 16, the minimum permitted age. None of the platforms asked the researchers to provide proof or complete another age-assurance check. Only the Australian livestreaming platform Kick refused to create an account without a proper age verification.

Read more
X wants to keep your video edits in-house, and it’s starting with captions and custom backgrounds
Multilingual captions and green screen support are rolling out on iOS now, with more updates promised in the coming weeks.
X redesigned video editor and recorder featured

X is giving creators on iOS a reason to stop reaching for third-party apps every time they want to polish a clip. The company just announced a redesigned Video Editor and Recorder, introducing tools creators have been asking for since before the platform even carried the X name. The launch closely follows X's renewed push into live video, where the company introduced a new Live Studio hub and dangled a million-dollar creator payout to get more people streaming on the platform.

Captions and custom backgrounds built-in

Read more
Reddit’s AI is hunting brands that dress marketing slop up as honest opinions
Reddit is using AI to stop brands from sneaking ads into your ChatGPT answers
Reddit app installed on phone

Reddit has become one of the internet's favorite places to share opinions. You can find just about any community there, no matter how niche. But there is a new problem in the platform, and it's the brands and marketers. Brands and agencies are now planting promotional posts and comments on Reddit in the hope that tools such as ChatGPT and Gemini will later surface them as genuine recommendations. The practice is part of generative engine optimization, or GEO, an emerging marketing strategy focused on influencing chatbot answers rather than conventional Google results.

Now, Reddit is fighting back with an AI of its own, just like some other platforms.

Read more