France seeks handle on Facebook algorithms to help
combat hate speech
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[May 10, 2019]
By Mathieu Rosemain and Gwénaëlle Barzic
PARIS (Reuters) - French authorities should
have more access to Facebook's algorithms and greater scope to audit the
social media company's internal policies against hate speech, a report
commissioned by President Emmanuel Macron has concluded.
It comes after Facebook has been heavily criticized by politicians and
the public for its failure to more rapidly remove footage of the March
shooting attack in Christchurch, New Zealand from its network. Fifty
people were killed in the assault, with footage of it circulating online
for days.
The French president, who will meet Facebook founder and Chief Executive
Mark Zuckerberg later on Friday, wants France to take a leading role on
tech regulation, seeking to strike a balance between what he perceives
as the United States' laissez-faire stance and China's iron grip on the
Internet.
The 33-page report, co-written by a former head of public affairs for
Google France, recommends increasing oversight over the world's largest
social media network and allowing an independent regulator to police the
efforts of large tech companies to deal with hate speech.
The report comes after Facebook allowed a team of French regulators to
spend six months inside the company monitoring its policies. It
represents a "half-time" assessment for their stint which started in
January.
"The inadequacy and lack of credibility in the self-regulatory approach
adopted by the largest platforms justify public intervention to make
them more responsible," the report said.
Companies like Facebook cannot simply declare themselves to be
transparent, it added, noting that checking the integrity of the
algorithms they use was a particularly complex task.
HELPFUL PRIMER
Responding to the report, Facebook's vice president for policy, Richard
Allan, said it was a helpful primer for the way forward and suggested
there were grounds for cooperation.
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A Facebook panel is seen during the Cannes Lions International
Festival of Creativity, in Cannes, France, June 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Eric Gaillard/File Photo
"The report sets out a path toward a new model for content regulation that has
the potential to be both effective and workable," he said.
"It would allow platforms to develop innovative solutions to keep their users
safe while being clearly accountable to a regulator for how well they do this."
This week, Chris Hughes, one of the founders of Facebook with Zuckerberg while
they were at Harvard, wrote in a long opinion piece in the New York Times that
he believed the company was too powerful and needed to be broken up.
France's parliament, where Macron's ruling party has a comfortable majority, is
debating legislation that would give the new regulator the power to fine tech
companies up to 4% of their global revenue if they don't do enough to remove
hateful content from their network.
"Our goal is to move ... toward proper regulation," a source close to the
Finance Ministry said.
Facebook's decision to allow the team of French regulators inside the company
was the first time the wary company had opened its doors in such a way.
The regulators did not have access to confidential corporate information, the
finance ministry official said. The French task-force has also been holding
meetings with Facebook in the United States.
(Reporting by Mathieu Rosemain and Gwenaelle Barzic; editing by Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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