Categories: Florida Politics

Wasserman Schultz Says Facebook is 'Playing Word Games'

Share

Lawmakers from both sides of the political aisle have expressed concerns over social media sites like Facebook, and tension increased after Facebook’s most recent outage that lasted hours. Coupled with Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen testifying before the U.S. Senate and more than 50 Attorney Generals signing a letter approving of a Senatorial probe into the social media company, the relationship between lawmakers and Facebook has only become more strained. After a recent interview between Nick Clegg, Facebook’s Vice President of Global Affairs, and George Stephanopoulos, Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D) accused the tech company of ‘playing word games.’

Providing a testimony during a Senate Commerce subcommittee hearing, Haugen accused Facebook of not properly policing content while also accusing Facebook of not being able to address concerns because it’s “understaffed.”

During an interview on ABC’s “This Week,” Clegg credited Haugen with suggesting that her and her team remove algorithms to better rank content. However, Clegg shared that this would not be effective.

“If you were just sort of, across the board, remove the algorithm, the first thing that would happen is that people would see more, not less hate speech,” Clegg commented, adding that people would also see “more, not less information” and “more, not less harmful content.”

In response, Rep. Wasserman Schultz expressed disapproval in the comments, arguing that Clegg is “playing word games by suggesting that ‘removing’ Facebook’s algorithms would make it more likely that people see hate speech is like telling a woman that she’s more likely to get pregnant if she uses birth control.”

Providing further elaboration to George Stephanopoulos, Clegg added that “those algorithmic systems precisely are designed like a great sort of giant spam filter to identify and deprecate and downgrade bad content.”

Haugen called Facebook a “national security issue,” explaining that “the choices being made inside of Facebook are disastrous for our children, for our public safety, for our privacy, and for our democracy.”

Daniel Molina

Daniel Molina is an award-winning senior reporter based in Miami. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English Literature from Florida International University. His hobbies include reading, writing, and watching films.

Recent Posts

Senate Candidate Debbie Mucarsel-Powell Wants to Debate Rick Scott in Spanish

TALLAHASSEE, FL—Democratic Senate candidate Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, inspired by the recently announced Presidential debates, is doubling…

7 hours ago

Last Squeeze🍊—5.17.2024—DeSantis, Dep of Education Target Antisemitic Mosque Leader—One FL Democrat Voted to Defund Police—Much More...

Florida Dept of Education Launches Inquiry into Islamic School Connected to Antisemitic Mosque Leader MIAMI,…

8 hours ago

GOP Senator Ingoglia Blasts 'Activist Judge' For His Latest Blockage of a DeSantis-Backed Law

TALLAHASSEE, FL—A top Republican Senator swiped at "activist judge" Mark Walker for striking down Thursday…

11 hours ago

61 Democrats Vote Against Condemning Violence Against Police

WASHINGTON— As Police Week, wrapped up in the nation’s capital, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives…

11 hours ago

Biden Blacklists More Companies Using Uyghur Slave Labor, Rubio Demands More

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) recently added twenty-six more Chinese companies, primarily from the textile industry,…

11 hours ago

Rubio Calls 'Campus Protestors' Criminal 'Trespassers' and 'Vandals'

Senator Marco Rubio (R) questioned the idea of glamorizing "campus protestors," instead calling them "trespassers"…

12 hours ago