City
Epaper

Facebook executive blames society, not social networks for COVID-19 misinformation

By ANI | Updated: December 13, 2021 14:50 IST

Society, not social networks, is to blame for COVID-19 misinformation, Andrew Bosworth, a key executive at Facebook, said in an interview with Axios on Monday.

Open in App

Society, not social networks, is to blame for COVID-19 misinformation, Andrew Bosworth, a key executive at Facebook, said in an interview with Axios on Monday.

He noted that free speech can sometimes be dangerous, especially when used to spread misinformation, but democracy must be able to tolerate it as it is one of the fundamental human rights.

"Individual humans are the ones who choose to believe or not believe a thing. They are the ones who choose to share or not share a thing. I don't feel comfortable at all saying they don't have a voice because I don't agree with what they said, I don't like what they said," Bosworth said.

When asked whether criticism of COVID-19 vaccination would be the same without social networks, Bosworth noted that Facebook plays a significant role in spreading authoritative information about COVID-19. However, according to the executive, it is still for users to decide whether to believe this information or to listen to the personal views of other people.

"That's their choice. They are allowed to do that. You have an issue with those people. You don't have an issue with Facebook. You can't put that on me," he said.

At the same time, Bosworth noted that disinformation is primarily a demand problem. According to him, social networks cannot deny people the information they seek, stressing that at some point the main responsibility lies with the individual. (ANI/Sputnik)

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: FacebookBosworthAndrew BosworthFacebook connectivityAfter facebookNl salviCs - connectivityWhatsapp facebookFacebook newsFacebook twitter
Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyWhy Australia Is Banning Children Under 16 From Social Media? Here’s the Reason

MumbaiMumbai Crime: Man Arrested for Obscene Social Media Post Targeting Political Family’s Women

BusinessMukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Share Price Jump Over 2% as Facebook Acquires 30% Stake in AI Venture

TechnologyMeta Layoffs: Facebook-Owned Firm to Cut 600 Employees From AI Unit

TechnologyCyber Crime Alert: How WhatsApp and Facebook Can Protect Your Money and Data from Scammers

International Realted Stories

InternationalDozens missing after boat carrying migrants capsizes near Gambia

InternationalISI stepping up espionage, disinformation ops against India: Intelligence agencies warn

InternationalTaiwan calls Chinese Communist Party "disgusting and sick" over alleged information warfare

InternationalTakaichi's hardline Taiwan stance fuels China tensions, policy concerns in Japan

InternationalBangladesh: Another Hindu man dies days after being brutally attacked, set on fire