Katie Couric grilled Sheryl Sandberg on Facebook's decision not to fact-check political ads
- Katie Couric questioned Sheryl Sandberg about Facebook's policy regarding political ads at the Vanity Fair New Establishment summit on Tuesday.
- Last month, Facebook announced that it would not fact-check political ads on the platform.
- Since then, Facebook's policy has been widely criticized, including by presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
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Katie Couric hit Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg with several tough questions about the company's political ad policy Tuesday at the Vanity Fair New Establishment summit in Beverly Hills.
Couric began the 40-minute panel, "Putting a Best Facebook Foreword," by grilling Sandberg on how the platform plans to prevent misinformation surrounding the 2020 US presidential election. After briefly talking about fake accounts and state-run accounts, the conversation pivoted to political ads.
Sandberg emphasized that Facebook has "dramatically different" transparency from 2016, explaining that users can now see where any page originated, and track all presidential ads. Couric took the opportunity to probe Sandberg on Facebook's policy of not fact-checking political ads.
"Why did Facebook announce not to fact check political ads last month? The Rand Corporation actually has a term for this, 'truth decay,' and Mark [Zuckerberg] himself has defended this decision, even as he expressed concerns about the erosion of truth online. What is the rationale for that?" she asked. Couric even preempted Sandberg's defense, "I know you're going to say, 'we're not a news organization, we're a platform.'"
"It's a hard conversation, and emotions are running very high on this," Sandberg said. "We're not doing this for the money." She declined to give an exact number, but called political ads a "very small," part of Facebook's profits.
"We take political ads because we really believe they are part of political discourse," Sandberg said.
But Couric didn't let the conversation end there. She quoted Vanita Gupta, former head of the DOJ Civil Rights Division, who said: "Simply put, while major news organizations strengthen fact-checking and accountability, Facebook is saying if you are a politician who wishes to peddle in lies, distortion and not-so-subtle racial appeals, welcome to our platform. We will not fact-check. You are automatically newsworthy. You are automatically exempt from scrutiny."
Sandberg continued to emphasized Facebook's commitment to transparency and free speech, echoing CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who maintained in a speech at Georgetown last week that he doesn't want to "censor politicians or news in a democracy."
Facebook declined to comment on Sandberg and Couric's conversation.
Facebook has been facing criticism for its policy of running political ads with misinformation, exempting them from the normal third-party fact-checking process. Presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren has been especially critical, and breaking up Facebook is a major part of her platform. Earlier this month, she ran a fake Facebook ad claiming that Zuckerberg supports Trump's reelection, and the company tried to call her out on Facebook, which did not go well for them.
During the interview, Sandberg reminded viewers that it's early in the election cycle, and "we're going to see a lot of controversial ads" going forward.