Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg aims to pacify U.S.
lawmakers
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[April 10, 2018]
By David Ingram and Dustin Volz
SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -
Facebook Inc Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg will strike a conciliatory
tone on Tuesday in testimony before Congress in an attempt to blunt
possible regulatory fallout from the privacy scandal engulfing his
social network.
The 33-year-old internet mogul is scheduled to appear at 2:15 p.m. (1815
GMT) before a joint hearing of the U.S. Senate's Commerce and Judiciary
committees.
Zuckerberg, who founded Facebook in his Harvard University dorm room in
2004, is fighting to demonstrate to critics that he is the right person
to go on leading what has grown into one of the world's largest
companies.
Facebook faces a mushrooming crisis of confidence among users,
advertisers, employees and investors after acknowledging that up to 87
million people, mostly in the United States, had their personal
information harvested from the site by Cambridge Analytica, a political
consultancy that has counted U.S. President Donald Trump among its
clients.
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Zuckerberg, who has never testified in a congressional hearing, said in
written testimony on Monday that he had made mistakes and had held too
narrow a view of the social network's role in society.
"Now we have to go through every part of our relationship with people
and make sure we're taking a broad enough view of our responsibility,"
he said.
Facebook hired several outside consultants to help coach Zuckerberg,
even holding mock sessions to prepare him for questions from lawmakers.
In an olive branch on Friday, Zuckerberg threw his support behind
proposed legislation requiring social media sites to disclose the
identities of buyers of online political campaign ads.
U.S. lawmakers have discussed legislation that would strengthen data
privacy protections and enforcement. Tighter regulation of how Facebook
uses its members' data could affect its ability to attract advertising
revenue, its lifeblood.
Some 40 senators out of the 100-member Senate sit on the two committees
holding Tuesday's hearing, setting up a possibly marathon hearing.
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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg walks to a meeting with Senator John
Thune (R-SD) on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., April 9, 2018.
REUTERS/Leah Millis
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To ease the way, Zuckerberg on Monday met some lawmakers privately, listening to
their concerns before they will have a chance to interrogate him in public.
Zuckerberg appeared willing "to turn things around where he sees mistakes that
have been made," Senator Bill Nelson, the top Democrat on the Senate Commerce
Committee, said after meeting with the CEO.
For hearings last year about Russia's alleged use of social media to influence
American politics, Facebook, Twitter Inc and Alphabet Inc's Google sent lawyers,
angering lawmakers.
Facebook's previous emissary "was a silver-tongued devil" who "said nothing,"
Republican Senator John Kennedy said on CNBC on Monday. Kennedy said he planned
to ask Zuckerberg about antitrust enforcement and its acquisition of rivals.
Zuckerberg will get a second dose of questioning on Wednesday from the U.S.
House Energy and Commerce Committee.
His perch atop Facebook is assured as long as he wants it, given that he remains
its controlling shareholder.
But his reputation has suffered as television comedians have mocked his
perceived robotic speaking patterns and allegedly cavalier attitude toward
privacy.
Shares in Facebook are down more than 14 percent since the Cambridge Analytica
scandal broke last month.
(Reporting by David Ingram in San Francisco and Dustin Volz in Washington;
Additional reporting by David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman)
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