Former Facebook executive says social media giants are ‘threat to democracy’

By Graeme Massie  Los Angeles  7 hours ago  
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/facebook-tech-social-media-tim-kendall-democracy-threat-b1041242.html


A former Facebook executive says that social media giants are a danger to 
democracy and could eventually cause a US civil war.

Tim Kendall, the former director of monetisation at Facebook, says that the 
social media industry needs urgent reform to prevent a dire outcome. He 
supports stronger regulation of the tech industry.

“Extreme outcomes are the logical end conclusion if there is no action on 
social media reform during the increasing destabilisation of civil society,” he 
told Fox News.

Mr Kendall is now the CEO of Moment, a company that says it is “fighting to 
reimagine the tech industry as one built for its users” and appears in 
Netflix’s documentary The Social Dilemma.


“The attention-based business model of social media companies is a threat to 
democracy. Full stop,” said Mr Kendall.

“We as users are attracted to content that entertains us and reinforces our 
views. ‘Big social,’ as I call it, knows this and presents information that 
will keep us coming back to their platforms.

“These corporate practices encourage online tribalism that exacerbates the 
societal division we see today amid unprecedented economic, climate, and public 
health turmoil.

“I truly believe things will not get better until tech companies move away from 
creating exploitative products that drive conflict over conversation, division 
over unity, and misinformation over truth.”

Mr Kendall said that he agreed with former Google employee Tristan Harris, who 
has described the tech industry as “big tobacco for our brain.”

“Big tobacco, big auto, and big social all share something in common: at the 
centre of their business model is an ingredient that is severely detrimental to 
the world,” said Mr Kendall.

“Big tobacco relies on nicotine, big auto relies on fossil fuels, and big 
social relies on user attention to generate revenue.

“None of these practices are sustainable for a healthy society.”

Mr Kendall says that a series of steps are essential to better control social 
media’s impact on society.

“First, until the financial incentives are removed these companies will 
continue to operate by creating social media addicts of its users,” he said.

“Second, we need better regulation. No industry, including tech, should be in 
the position to regulate themselves.

“Third, we need innovation to help people take back their lives from their 
devices.”

--
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
Link@mailman.anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to