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Facebook Are 'Morally Bankrupt Liars' Says New Zealand's Privacy Commissioner (theguardian.com) 328

New Zealand's privacy commissioner has lashed out at social media giant Facebook in the wake of the Christchurch attacks, calling the company "morally bankrupt pathological liars." From a report: The commissioner used his personal Twitter page to lambast the social network, which has also drawn the ire of prime minister Jacinda Ardern for hosting a livestream of the attacks that left 50 dead, which was then copied and shared all over the internet. "Facebook cannot be trusted," wrote Edwards. "They are morally bankrupt pathological liars who enable genocide (Myanmar), facilitate foreign undermining of democratic institutions. [They] allow the live streaming of suicides, rapes, and murders, continue to host and publish the mosque attack video, allow advertisers to target 'Jew haters' and other hateful market segments, and refuse to accept any responsibility for any content or harm. "They #dontgiveazuck" wrote Edwards. He later deleted the tweets, saying they had prompted "toxic and misinformed traffic."
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Facebook Are 'Morally Bankrupt Liars' Says New Zealand's Privacy Commissioner

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  • sounds about right (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    There are clear cases where FB and other services have aided and abetted terrorists. I don't understand how they get away with it, really.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by alvinrod ( 889928 )
      Probably feeding a troll, but the ISPs served the data to people, the devices displayed that content, etc. Are they to be held similarly culpable for this?

      This ultimately reduces to the argument that because books might contain "dangerous ideas" we really ought to just ban them. Authoritarians will always seek out ways to control others and they're scarcely above using tragedy in order to accomplish those goals.

      If you believe that there are terrible people in the world, trying to control them won't st
  • He mentioned that rain is wet and the sky is blue.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @09:59AM (#58403622)
    Facebook and many other Internet companies create software to enable people to communicate. Many people are jerks or morally bankrupt. Unfortunate side effect of the Internet is it allows people you disagree with or even hate to communicate. If you want to solve the problem, find a way to get people to stop hating each other.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @10:49AM (#58403944) Homepage Journal

      It's more than simply enabling communication. Facebook data mines your personal info and sells it on. It allows Russia to target you with misinformation and influence your political discourse, something that is explicitly illegal in many countries. It helped Cambridge Analytica cheat during the brexit referendum.

      Facebook builds communities. Communities that are dedicated to committing crimes in some cases. Facebook enables people to broadcast the murder of others, which at the very least is a severe violation of the rights of the victims.

      And Facebook lies about it all the time. Facebook wants you to trust them, wants to present itself as a safe place to be, but it's not. Facebook are a bunch of pathological liars, it's their core value. Pretend to be your friend while ruthlessly exploiting you and trying to cover it all up.

      • by a billion or so users.

        Yes. AI is being used to try to police/filter it quickly these days (because with a billion possible contributors, how else could you do it fast?) but the challenge for that AI to recognize really bad content (the only kind that should be filtered, right?) is very complex. Human moderators often can't even do it reliably.

        So realistically, it has to be a system that relies partly on human users to flag bad content for immediate review. Then a large team of moderators needs to check a
    • If your kids go to play out in the neighborhood with the other kids, but it's always rowdy and loud, kids yelling at other kids in non-fun ways and making your kids upset, kids hitting other kids, things getting broken, games and actual fun being spoiled randomly by other kids, and you can't seem to get the other parents to get things under control, you bring your kids inside and tell them they can't go out to play in the neighborhood anymore. You find somewhere for your kids to go play that's safe and that
  • ... from a lawyer working for a politician.

    Justice Minister Judith Collins said at appointment "I am confident Mr Edwards will be highly credible in the role of the Commissioner and will be able to engage both the public and private sectors."

    Well, Ms Collins was certainly right.

    There seems to be some spine in NZ politicians and lawyers...

  • by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @10:08AM (#58403694)

    It's easy to attack and criticize. But he offers no solution. Seriously, how does this "privacy commissioner" *think* one would moderate platforms this large... particularly while negating the possibility of false positives?

    I haven't seen the NZ shooter's stream in full. But the clips I've seen look like they could come from a FPS streaming on Twitch. Probably, that was because the news was sensationalizing the "just like a video game" element of the stream. But still... if a human can mistake the stream for a Twitch feed, than a machine certainly can. So automation is right out. You need humans monitoring content and more human monitoring those humans and even more humans monitoring those humans to both prevent things like that lifestream; but also prevent false positives (The innocent should never be punished along with the guilty. So false positives are unacceptable.). I can't even fathom the size of the moderation workforce that would be necessary, given the size of platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and the like.

    And if Facebook, Twitter, et al. ever DID manage to build that sort of moderation regime; how much do you want to bet that the we-hate-nerds outrage crowd would then be screeching "big brother" and "censorship"? It's especially ironic, considering that the screecher in this particular case IS a privacy commissioner... advocating for a level of surveillance that would eliminate anything even resembling privacy.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @10:53AM (#58403968) Homepage Journal

      The NZ terrorist's video could easily be blocked if they really cared. Look at how good YouTube is at recognizing someone merely humming a few bars of some copyrighted song. Play a 5 frame clip of some TV series in the middle of your hour long critique video and YouTube will copyright flag it.

    • by dAzED1 ( 33635 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @10:55AM (#58404000) Journal
      FB got as large as it did by disregarding all privacy or reasonable content controls. They weren't stupid, they didn't accidentally get where they are - they designed it that way on purpose. That's where they get their billions. Saying "well, it's too big to do that" is stupid. Yes, doing privacy controls after the fact is more expensive...but that's true for all companies and all scopes of software, it's not unique to large places. They didn't do that type of content 3 years ago. So, if they can't figure out how to keep live vids of rapes and mass murders off their platform, they should end that entire aspect of their platform. They should NOT profit off such things.
    • For starters, saying you have a level of privacy on Facebook from Facebook is an interesting idea to still hold. But, either way, it isn't the Privacy Commissioners problem. His problem is that he is legally powerless against Facebook so they just ignore him. This is actually the fault of the New Zealand Government. The solution is fairly simple, all the Government has to decide is whether Facebook is a platform or a publisher. If they are a platform then they can get warrants for the people who posted the
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Faulty reasoning (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sinij ( 911942 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @10:09AM (#58403706)
    While it is tempting to agree with the conclusion that FB is "morally bankrupt liars", the rationale offered is extremely faulty.

    Of all people, privacy commissioner should understand that a system that could proactively prevent "live streaming of suicides, rapes, and murders" would be extremely hostile to concepts of both privacy and all forms of freedom of expression.
    • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

      Of all people, privacy commissioner should understand that a system that could proactively prevent "live streaming of suicides, rapes, and murders" would be extremely hostile to concepts of both privacy and all forms of freedom of expression.

      Maybe he does? The best way to destroy something threatening is to be in charge of it, after all.

      • by sinij ( 911942 )
        A much simpler and more plausible explanation is simple stupidity.
        • The presence of stupidity doesn't mean that there's no malice though. Hanlon's razor only says you should start with the assumption of stupidity and doesn't imply that you can't have malicious stupidity.
  • Yep, that's Zuckerberg and Sandberg, for sure. The two of them should be buried up to their necks in a fire ant hill.
  • Technically they have broken no laws.

  • You know, in communication, the two parties exchange information and everything in between is the communication channel. The wires, electricity, internet, facebook. If you blame one of them, blame all.
  • I haven't seen the clips, nor have I any particular desire to see the clips. But since I'm ignorant of the content, I have to ask the question... How was it different from a CNN video feed?

    Wars have provided countless video feeds of people being killed. Missiles hitting targets in the early dawn hours... Munitions being dropped on positions... Whole divisions of mechanized forces being buried in sand by bombs...

    I get the not wanting to glorify terrorism argument, and I agree to a point that eliminating

  • Wow, New Zealand's Privacy Commissioner is pretty slow on the uptake.

    Where were all these people back when Facebook was still in the process of overtaking everyone?
  • by WCMI92 ( 592436 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @10:59AM (#58404036) Homepage

    But no one has the guts to stop it. Facebook needs to be smashed into 10,000 pieces along with Google.

    Sorry Microsoft, you were 1990's evil.

  • by Venona2018 ( 5425598 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @11:05AM (#58404084)

    If you are in New Zealand, you can get up to 10 years in jail just for having the shooter's manifesto in your possession:

    Link Here [businessinsider.com]

    Ten Years. For having a hateful text document on your computer.

    I would call that morally bankrupt.

  • Just use 'corporation'. It takes less keystrokes.

    This is not really a problem. I expect corporations in which I have an ownership stake (shareholder) to operate up to the limits allowed by laws* to maximize profits. Nothing more, nothing less. Not wasting money or avoiding opportunities based on some unquantifiable touchy-feely nonsense.

    *Whose laws? Facebook is a US corporation. The fact that an Australian, located in New Zealand chose to use it as a streaming platform isn't the fault of FB. And we have a

  • by Maelwryth ( 982896 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @11:15AM (#58404178) Homepage Journal

    He has every right to be pissed and the New Zealand government has egg all over it's face on this. Recently NZ has been updating it's Privacy Act and they yet again left it toothless with no power for the Privacy Commission to enforce compliance [nzherald.co.nz]. But hey, that's what you get when the MP in charge of the Bill is also in charge of the GCSB [parliament.nz]. Well that, and a blanket exemption for the GCSB. This was before the Christchurch Shootings and look where we are now. It looks as though the Bill wasn't rewritten to so much to protect peoples privacy as it was to allow our economic compliance with the GDPR and gain more government exemptions. I doubt the Privacy Commissioner is as pissed at Facebook as he is at being left totally impotent by the New Zealand Government.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @12:37PM (#58404698)
    What took them so long?
  • Did this goofball stop to think that every single thing he mentioned could have been accomplished with the plain-old-telephone system?

  • That's pretty much their business model, isn't it?
  • Facebook is used as the universal login to literally millions of websites. Make it illegal for a company like Facebook to control universal login, and nobody would need a Facebook account any more. (Shouldn't universal login be open source, maybe even blockchain-based?) I deleted my Facebook account last year... which doesn't mean Facebook deleted any of my data.
  • I would suggest that Facebook employees, like their fearless and intrepid leader, are not morally bankrupt liars or anything of the sort. They are, at a median age of 28, simply young and unable to put their ideas into any context beyond utility and/or profit. Now they have all built a company with revenue streams dependent on questionable practices, and its not easy to choose any option that resembles "end our distasteful practices, and the revenue associated with them" and thereby keep all it's kids in th
  • by ukoda ( 537183 ) on Monday April 08, 2019 @05:11PM (#58406504) Homepage
    First context. I am 56 year old New Zealander. I don't like censorship in general and generally support free speech, both with common sense exceptions. I seldom use Facebook as life is too short to waste scrolling down a screen clicking like buttons. My usage of it would be about 2 hours a week max. Have to confess I'm a bit addicted to Slashdot however.

    It is hard to express how deeply the event in Christchurch has affected the nation, it certainly has had exactly the opposite effect of what the to be nameless perpetrator intended.

    As much as I would love to think AI could magically block such live streams I think that will never be practical. Disabling it for all would be overkill. I'm surprised it only 17 minutes to stop the live stream given how hard companies like Facebook work to block people from contacting a real live staff member. I think they could improve the communications channels between law enforcement and their staff. That said with modern technology you are never going to be effective at stopping bad stuff being streamed.

    The repeated sharing of the content is a different story. Youtube is pretty good at automatically blocking reposts of stuff and this is an area where AIs can be effective. If Facebook can't effective block sharing of this video then they do have something to answer for.

    People in senior government roles need to work hard to separate their person views from those of their role. Given it is hard to tell a person's personal views from official views of their roles it is probably best that when they take on such roles they stop personal social media post. In this case I think personal feelings of the commissioner got the better of him and he posted something not well thought through. Mind you if you look at the endless questionable tweets of the POTUS the I think the commissioner's tweet look pretty mild.

    At the end of the day I think it is stupid of one government to try an apply its laws to the website in another country with the exception of servers physically hosted within their territory. That should not stop a government from making their views clear to website owners, they just shouldn't expect much as a result. In general I am proud of how our nation, government, politicians and people have handled themselves.

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