Mark Zuckerberg Defends Facebook Against President's "Anti-Trump" Tweet

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Donald Trump took to Twitter. Mark Zuckerberg responded on Facebook.

On Wednesday, the Facebook CEO responded to the president's comments that his company “was always anti-Trump” with a bulleted statement that attempted to downplay the notion that the social network influenced the 2016 election for either party.

“The facts suggest the greatest role Facebook played in the 2016 election was different from what most are saying,” Zuckerberg wrote on Facebook.

It's been a contentious month for Facebook after the company acknowledged efforts by foreign entities to manipulate the race on its platform by buying targeted ads. Last week, the company said it would have copies of more than 3,000 ads with ties to Russian actors to give to the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, with Zuckerberg announcing a new policy with for advertising so-called dark posts. On Wednesday, the company, along with Google and Twitter, were invited to testify in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee on Nov. 1.

A source close to Facebook confirmed that the company had received the invite, but that it had not decided who to send in front of the committee.

“Trump says Facebook is against him,” wrote Zuckerberg. “Liberals say we helped Trump. Both sides are upset about ideas and content they don't like. That's what running a platform for all ideas looks like.

Earlier on Wednesday, Trump wrote in the first of a two-part tweet that Facebook had been opposed to his candidacy: “Facebook was always anti-Trump,” he said. “The Networks were always anti-Trump hence,Fake News, @nytimes(apologized) & @WaPo were anti-Trump. Collusion?”

@realDonaldTrump / Twitter / Via Twitter: @realDonaldTrump

In his post, Zuckerberg attempted to outline the positives that his company brought to the election. He noted that “more people had a voice in this election than ever before” because of Facebook and notes that all the candidates had Facebook pages through which they interacted with tens of millions of followers. The post, however, made no mention of the fake news and information that the platform helped to proliferate.

“After the election, I made a comment that I thought the idea misinformation on Facebook changed the outcome of the election was a crazy idea,” Zuckerberg wrote. “Calling that crazy was dismissive and I regret it. This is too important an issue to be dismissive.”

The Facebook CEO also hinted that he may be in favor of campaign spending reforms for online advertising. “Campaigns spent hundreds of millions advertising online to get their messages out even further. That's 1000x more than any problematic ads we've found,” he said.

Since the election, Zuckerberg has stayed out of Trump's orbit. In December, during a meeting of technology leaders at Manhattan's Trump Tower, Facebook opted to send Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg to sit down with the then-president-elect. He also did not attend a similar meeting for technology leaders in June at the White House, with the company reportedly citing “scheduling conflicts” at the time.

Zuckerberg has also largely avoided saying Trump's name in public settings. He discussed “fearful voices calling for building walls” at a keynote for the company's F8 conference in April 2016 and made a veiled criticism at the presidential administration's approach to immigration at Harvard University's May commencement, but did not mention the president's name at either event. Similarly in a Facebook post criticizing the president's decision to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy, he did not name Trump.

It remains to be seen if Zuckerberg or another representative for Facebook will testify in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee in November.

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Mark Zuckerberg / Facebook / Via Facebook: zuck

Quelle: <a href="Mark Zuckerberg Defends Facebook Against President's "Anti-Trump" Tweet“>BuzzFeed

Facebook, Google And Twitter Have Been Asked To Testify Publicly In The Senate’s Russia Investigation

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Facebook, Twitter and Google officials have been called to testify publicly before the Senate Intelligence Committee on November 1 about Russian attempts to use social media to sway last year’s presidential election after Facebook revealed that a Russian troll operation had purchased more than 3,000 political ads on the platform.

The news, first reported by Recode, was confirmed to BuzzFeed News by a source familiar with the matter.

The Senate Intelligence Committee, which is leading congressional investigations into Russian election interference, has increased its scrutiny of Facebook, in particular, following its disclosure earlier this month that fake accounts and pages on the site linked to a Russian troll farm spent approximately $100,000 on political ads during the presidential race.

A person familiar with the situation said that Facebook is considering the invitation, but has not decided which executives to send to the hearing. Representatives for Google and Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Sen. Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, declined to confirm the invitations to reporters on Wednesday, but said he had spoken to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently. Rep. Adam Schiff, the lead Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said he had also spoken with Zuckerberg.

Burr said Tuesday members want to hear from someone at Facebook during the public hearing who can speak about “what they need to do to identify foreign money that might come in and what procedures, if any, should be put in law to make sure that elections are not intruded by foreign entities.”

“Clearly it's the bigger companies that we think might have been used and we're working with them to acquire the type of data that we need to look at a public hearing,” Burr told reporters.

The planned public hearing, during which senators will grill officials from all three companies, comes as Facebook is under fire for allowing advertisers to target anti-Semitic interests and being slow to acknowledge efforts by foreign actors to manipulate the 2016 election using the social media platform. Some Democratic senators are reportedly already working on legislation to require greater ad transparency from Facebook and others.

Facebook announced last week that it would give both the House and Senate Intelligence Committees copies of the more than 3,000 Russia-linked ads. When asked on Tuesday if he had seen the ads, Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the committee, said: “Soon. Really soon. This week soon.”

Burr declined to say whether he had viewed the ads, but he said the committee has “traded a lot of documents with Facebook” and that the social media giant has “been incredibly helpful to us.”

Burr added that the committee is in conversation “with everybody in the social platform arena that we think can provide us insight into whether there was any foreign manipulation of their sites.”

“I think their actions just last week indicate that they believe that it's important to get out in front of this and share as much of it as possible,” Burr said of Facebook.

Facebook announced last week it would publicly display so-called “dark posts,” which advertisers buy to promote to specific audiences but that remain concealed from the broader public. “We will work with others to create a new standard for transparency in online political ads,” Zuckerberg said in a live video address announcing the move, among others measures the company is taking in an attempt to increase transparency.

Asked if it, too, would reveal dark posts, Twitter told BuzzFeed News it has nothing new to announce.

The plan to hold a open hearing with Facebook, Twitter and Google comes as the panel is expected to begin publicly interviewing select high-profile witnesses in October, including Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump’s longtime personal lawyer.

Quelle: <a href="Facebook, Google And Twitter Have Been Asked To Testify Publicly In The Senate’s Russia Investigation“>BuzzFeed

Emails Show How An Ivy League Prof Tried To Do Damage Control For His Bogus Food Science

Emails Show How An Ivy League Prof Tried To Do Damage Control For His Bogus Food Science

Small Stuff for BuzzFeed News; Getty Images (4); Alamy (2)

The Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, a $22 million federally funded program that pushes healthy-eating strategies in almost 30,000 schools, is partly based on studies that contained flawed — or even missing — data.

The main scientist behind the work, Cornell University professor Brian Wansink, has made headlines for his research into the psychology of eating. His experiments have found, for example, that women who put cereal on their kitchen counters weigh more than those who don’t, and that people will pour more wine if they’re holding the glass than if it's sitting on a table. Over the past two decades he’s written two popular books and more than 100 research papers, and enjoyed widespread media coverage (including on BuzzFeed).

Yet over the past year, Wansink and his “Food and Brand Lab” have come under fire from scientists and statisticians who’ve spotted all sorts of red flags — including data inconsistencies, mathematical impossibilities, errors, duplications, exaggerations, eyebrow-raising interpretations, and instances of self-plagiarism — in 50 of his studies.

Journals have so far retracted three of these papers and corrected at least seven. Now, emails obtained by BuzzFeed News through public information requests reveal for the first time that Wansink and his Cornell colleague David Just are also in the process of correcting yet another study, “Attractive names sustain increased vegetable intake in schools,” published in Preventive Medicine in 2012.

The most recent retraction — a rare move typically seen as a black mark on a scientist’s reputation — happened last Thursday, when JAMA Pediatrics pulled a similar study, also from 2012, titled “Can branding improve school lunches?”

Brian Wansink in 2007.

Stan Honda / AFP / Getty Images

Both studies claimed that children are more likely to choose fruits and vegetables when they’re jazzed up, such as when carrots are called “X-Ray Vision Carrots” and when apples have Sesame Street stickers. The underlying theory is that fun, descriptive branding will not only make an eater more aware of the food, but will “also raise one’s taste expectations,” as the scientists explained in one of the papers.

The studies have been cited more than 75 times by others, according to Web of Science, and were funded by a grant of nearly $99,000 from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Healthy Eating Research program. The foundation told BuzzFeed News it hasn’t awarded him any grants since then.

The two studies have also been touted as evidence for the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, cofounded by Wansink and Just in 2010. It promotes “simple evidence-based strategies” to encourage students to make healthy choices, participate in federally subsidized lunch programs, and waste less food. The USDA has funded $8.4 million in research grants related to the program to date, according to an agency spokesperson. Since 2014, it’s also awarded nearly $14 million in training grants. Almost 30,000 schools have adopted those techniques, and the government pays each one up to $2,000 for doing so. (The program says it’s also funded by Target and Wansink’s Cornell lab.)

One of the program’s recommendations is that school cafeterias feature a fruit or vegetable of the day and label it with “a creative, descriptive name.” Suggestions include “orange squeezers,” “monkey phones (bananas),” “snappy apples,” “cool-as-a-cucumber slices,” and “sweetie pie sweet potatoes.” Branding food in this way “can increase consumption by over 30%,” according to the program’s website. As proof, the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement cites the JAMA Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine studies, among others.

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The USDA told BuzzFeed News that it has been talking to Cornell’s Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs (the BEN Center), which administers the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, about some of the allegedly flawed research. The agency “believes that scientific integrity is important, and that program and policy decisions should be based on strong evidence,” wrote USDA spokesperson Amanda Heitkamp.

“We have discussed these concerns with the BEN Center, and they have plans to address them in consultation with the Cornell University Office of Research Integrity and Assurance,” Heitkamp said. But the evidence behind the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement, she noted, comes from other work as well. “Smarter Lunchroom strategies are based upon widely researched principles of behavioral economics, as well as a strong body of practice that supports their ongoing use.”

A spokesperson for the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement echoed this sentiment, pointing to studies done by non-Cornell researchers that support the program’s strategies.

Cornell and Wansink did not return requests for comment, and Just declined to speak with BuzzFeed News. In previous public comments, Wansink dismissed some of the errors as minor and inconsequential to the studies’ overall conclusions. He also claimed that his studies have been replicated by other researchers. “One reason some of these findings are cited so much is because other researchers find the same types of results,” he told Retraction Watch in February. In March, he told the Chronicle of Higher Education that field studies should be taken with a grain of salt, as opposed to research done in a controlled setting like a laboratory. “Science is messy in a lot of ways,” he said.

But his critics take these problems very seriously, pointing out how rapidly his research has been adopted into the real world.

“It’s not sufficient evidence to roll out interventions in thousands of schools, in my opinion,” said Eric Robinson, a behavioral scientist at the University of Liverpool, who has found that several of Wansink’s studies cited by the Smarter Lunchrooms Movement made the strategies sound more effective than the data showed.

Others are disappointed that Wansink has, by and large, failed to adequately address most of the alleged mistakes — particularly when the entire field of psychological research is being dissected for studies that fail to hold up in repeat experiments.

Tim van der Zee, a graduate student at Leiden University in the Netherlands and one of the first researchers to spot errors in Wansink’s work, said that aside from correcting and sharing data for a handful of the challenged papers, the professor, his coauthors, and Cornell “remain inexplicably hidden in silence.”

“One of the fundamental principles of the scientific method is transparency — to conduct research in a way that can be assessed, verified, and reproduced,” he told BuzzFeed News. “This is not optional — it is imperative.”

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Wansink began drawing scrutiny last November when, in a now-deleted blog post, he praised a grad student for taking the data from a “failed study” of an all-you-can-eat Italian lunch buffet and reanalyzing it multiple times until she came up with interesting results. These findings — that, for example, men overeat when women are around — eventually resulted in a series of published studies about pizza consumption.

To outside scientists, it reeked of statistical manipulation — that the data had been sliced and diced so much that the results were just false positives. It’s a problem that has cropped up again and again in social science research, and that a growing number of scientists are trying to address by replicating studies and calling out errors on social media.

Over the winter, van der Zee saw that Wansink’s blog post was accruing dozens of disapproving comments. He teamed up with two other scientists who were similarly intrigued: Nicholas Brown, also a graduate student in the Netherlands, and Jordan Anaya, a computational biologist in Virginia. At first they exchanged emails with Wansink about apparent errors in four of the pizza papers, van der Zee said. But when he stopped replying to them, they decided to go public with the 150 errors they’d found in the four papers. Then Andrew Gelman, a statistician at Columbia University, accused Wansink’s lab of manipulating the data — or using “junk science, in his words — to dress up their conclusions.

These critiques soon captured journalists’ attention. In early February, Retraction Watch interviewed Wansink about his disputed work, and New York magazine declared that “A Popular Diet-Science Lab Has Been Publishing Really Shoddy Research.”

The next day, Wansink wrote an email to more than 40 friends and collaborators with the subject line “Moving forward after Pizza Gate.” He called the barrage of criticism “cyber-bullying,” and seemed to dismiss the errors, explaining that most stemmed from “missing data, rounding errors, and [some numbers] being off by 1 or 2.”

He told the other scientists that the mistakes didn’t change the conclusions of the four papers, and sought to reassure them that they were on the right side of history.

“For a group of people who are so innovative, so hard-working, and who try so tirelessly to make the world healthier, this could be disheartening,” he wrote. “Fortunately, we have too many other great ideas and solutions that keep our eyes fixed on the horizon in front of us.”

The horizon, as it turned out, was darker than he anticipated, as shown in dozens of emails between Wansink and collaborators who work at public universities, obtained via records requests by BuzzFeed News.

After helping to dissect the pizza papers, Brown turned his sights on the now-retracted “Can branding improve school lunches?”

The study claimed that elementary school students were more likely to choose an apple instead of a cookie if the apple had an Elmo sticker on it. The takeaway: Popular brands and cartoons could successfully promote healthy fare over junk food.

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In a blog post, Brown expressed concern about how the data had been crunched, and confusion about how exactly the experiment had worked. He noted that a bar graph looked much different in an earlier version. And, he pointed out, the scientists had said their findings could help “preliterate” children — which seemed odd, since the children in the study were ages 8 to 11.

In yet more scathing blog posts, Anaya and data scientist James Heathers pointed out mistakes and inconsistencies in the Preventive Medicine study, “Attractive names sustain increased vegetable intake in schools,” which claimed that elementary school students ate more carrots when the vegetables were dubbed “X-ray Vision Carrots.”

Both papers were written by Wansink and Just, as well as Collin Payne, an associate professor of marketing at New Mexico State University. (Payne declined to comment.)

Wansink wrote to his coauthors and a few others who had helped with the papers on Feb. 21: “Back here in Ithaca we’re busy with a bunch of crazy stuff.”

“One of the things we’re facing is people challenging some of our old papers,” Wansink wrote. “What our critics want to do is to show there [sic] are bogus so they can challenge all of the Smarter Lunchrooms policies.”

But there was a problem: He couldn’t find the data for either study. “We can’t seem to find them,” he wrote. “Any chance you have them in any files.”

The following week, Brown blogged about several papers in which Wansink appeared to have plagiarized from his previous work, and New York magazine wrote about it. Wansink wrote an apologetic email to several deans at Cornell, trying to explain the “newest saga.” He admitted that there were duplications, but believed them all to be justified, saying at one point that certain paragraphs were “important enough to be repeated.”

“For someone who’s been a noncontroversial person for 56 years, this has been an upsetting month, and I’m ashamed of the difficulties it has given you, and our great Dyson School, College, and University,” Wansink wrote.

“All the numbers seem to be within one baby carrot of each other.”

Quelle: <a href="Emails Show How An Ivy League Prof Tried To Do Damage Control For His Bogus Food Science“>BuzzFeed

Amazon’s New Echo Speaker Is Just $99

BuzzFeed News

Today at a surprise event in Seattle Amazon announced the newest edition of its now-hallmark product, the Echo speaker.

The new version will cost $99, which is significantly cheaper than the $179.99 version currently in stores.

The first images of the new product show what appears to be a shorter, wider cloth-covered cylinder that looks a bit more like a speaker. That might be because the new Echo features updated audio components like a dedicated woofer and tweeter. The speaker will also have upgraded Dolby sound. According Amazon, the device's voice recognition technology has also been given a second-generation upgrade.

The new Echo will be available starting today. And for those looking for a full home experience, the company will also be selling them in 3 packs at a $50 discount.

Quelle: <a href="Amazon’s New Echo Speaker Is Just “>BuzzFeed

Donald Trump Doesn't Have Access To Twitter's New 280 Character Limit

But it turns out, Trump wasn’t included in the 280 character test group, meaning that for now he’s going to have to keep tweeting just like the rest of the haters and losers. Sad!

But it turns out, Trump wasn't included in the 280 character test group, meaning that for now he's going to have to keep tweeting just like the rest of the haters and losers. Sad!

Trump in Cleveland in July 2016.

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

The new 280 character limit isn't for everyone. In a blog post, Twitter wrote that “we want to try it out with a small group of people before we make a decision to launch to everyone.”

But Biz Stone, a co-founder of Twitter, tweeted Tuesday evening that Trump is not in the 280 character test group. A Twitter spokesperson later confirmed to BuzzFeed News that Trump was not included, explaining that the test group was selected at random.

Case in point, Trump has used Twitter this week to sustain his growing feud with NFL players who kneel during the national anthem before games. Since entering politics and winning the president, Trump has similarly used Twitter to lash out at a dizzying array enemies in both politics and popular culture.

His tweets regularly rack up thousands of retweets and end up screen shotted and shared on cable news for days.

Trump also regularly uses Twitter to reveal his geo-political priorities, often times with controversial results.

Trump also regularly uses Twitter to reveal his geo-political priorities, often times with controversial results.

Twitter / Via Twitter: @realDonaldTrump

On Monday, for example, Trump weighed in on the ongoing crisis in Puerto Rico, as the island grapples with the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. The president's tweets drew some criticism, however, for focusing on Wall Street and the electrical grid.

Trump has also tweeted about the escalating situation in North Korea, referring to dictator Kim Jong Un as “Little Rocket Man” and warning “they won't be around much longer!”

North Korea's foreign minister responded by saying that the tweet amounted to a declaration of war. Asked for comment on Trump's tweet — specifically if it
violates the company's terms of service — a Twitter spokesperson told
BuzzFeed News
it “does not comment on individual accounts for privacy
and security reasons.”

It's still unclear if the 280 character test will be expanded to all Twitter users — including Trump. So for now, the president will have to keep posting unthreaded tweetstorms about world leaders, natural disasters, and TV ratings.

LINK: Twitter Tests Doubling Its Character Limit To 280

LINK: Twitter Might Increase The Character Limit To 280 And People Responded With 2: “NO”

Quelle: <a href="Donald Trump Doesn't Have Access To Twitter's New 280 Character Limit“>BuzzFeed

Longer Tweets Are Fine. I Know, Because We've Had Them In Japan Forever.

Twitter / Via Twitter: @jneeley78

American Twitter is freaking out about a planned change to the service that will allow for 280-character tweets, like this one from Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey:

Are you worried about living in a world where every tweet is that long? Then let me offer you some words of advice, sent from the future — or at least from a place where tweets have always been this long: Japan.

Thanks to the way the Japanese language works, you can sometimes say an entire word with a single character. Think of it like how you can say “pizza” with one single emoji. Even if it's not always one word per character, you can definitely say a whole lot more in 140 than you can in English.

Take, for example, this tweet by Misato Nagoya, a lifestyle writer for BuzzFeed Japan:

It's exactly 140 characters, because we've mastered the art of writing things exactly 140 characters long in Japanese too. But here's how you'd translate it to English:

I don't want to go on a trip abroad, don't want a cute pet, don't want an expensive car, don't want fashionable clothes. Not at all. All I want is just to live in a comfortable home, cook by myself, and eat what I wanna eat. That's all. But it is not easy to make these tiny dreams come true. My life sucks.

That tweet is pretty depressing — trust me, Misato is fun in real life! — but it's also 307 characters long. And it's totally normal for Japanese Twitter.

Here's another one from Misato:

Again, exactly 140. (We're good at this.) In English:

If I have baby, I would love to raise with lots of love. BUT after real moms told me how hard it is, I think it is almost impossible for me. Too few kindergartens in the city to find a place to leave my kid. The difficulty of keeping a work-life balance. The high costs of raising kid including education. I am already overwhelmed doing things just for me. How could I take care of my child too? So all I can and should do now is to support moms who are raising children.

That's 471 characters!

But this is just how Twitter is in Japan, and we love it just as much as you do in America. And we have just as many hilarious memes, weird Twitter subcultures, and massive cultural moments based on tweets as you guys do.

Twitter even seems to recognize that we don't need any more characters here — while they are testing the new 280-character option around the world, they are not offering it in China, South Korea or Japan, because we've all been living in the long-tweet future since Day 1.

Don't worry — it's fine here in the long-tweet future. You'll love it, or it least you'll only hate it as much as you hate Twitter already.

Quelle: <a href="Longer Tweets Are Fine. I Know, Because We've Had Them In Japan Forever.“>BuzzFeed

Twitter Tests Doubling Its Character Limit To 280

A 140-character tweet (left) and one with 280 characters (right).

Twitter

Twitter’s 140-character limit could soon be toast.

The company is considering nixing its long-defining constraint in favor a new limit: 280 characters.

The change, which Twitter is currently testing globally with a small group, would apply to tweets in every language except Japanese, Chinese, and Korean — which already allow you to say more with fewer characters.

“We want every person around the world to easily express themselves on Twitter, so we're doing something new: we're going to try out a longer limit, 280 characters, in languages impacted by cramming,” Twitter said in a blog post.

The test is sure to provoke a strong reaction among Twitter’s hardcore users, who have a long history of reacting strongly to changes in the service’s fundamentals, such as Twitter’s decision to transform the timeline from reverse chronological order to one that’s algorithmically sorted.

“We understand since many of you have been Tweeting for years, there may be an emotional attachment to 140 characters – we felt it, too. But we tried this, saw the power of what it will do, and fell in love with this new, still brief, constraint,” Twitter said its blog post. “We want to try it out with a small group of people before we make a decision to launch to everyone.”

When Jack Dorsey became Twitter CEO in 2015, he declared a willingness to rethink the entire product to make it more appealing to the masses. “We continue to show a questioning of our fundamentals in order to make the product easier and more accessible to more people,” Dorsey said in a July 2015 earnings call. He’s followed through on the promise, adding live video, introducing the algorithmic timeline, changing “faves” to “likes,” creating personalized article recommendations based on Twitter users’ networks, and more. A new character limit would follow the pattern.

Dorsey’s strategy has produced mixed results so far. Since he made the declaration about questioning Twitter’s fundamentals, the company’s stock has lost approximately half its value. But Twitter has added more than 10 million users since then.

The same tweet in different languages

Twitter

In Japan, whose language allows people to convey complex thoughts in a small number of characters, Twitter has outpaced Facebook. The company is clearly seizing upon lessons learned there as it tests these longer tweets. “Our research shows us that the character limit is a major cause of frustration for people Tweeting in English, but it is not for those Tweeting in Japanese,” Twitter said. “In all markets, when people don’t have to cram their thoughts into 140 characters and actually have some to spare, we see more people Tweeting.”

Quelle: <a href="Twitter Tests Doubling Its Character Limit To 280“>BuzzFeed

Facebook Can't Say Whether Russians Bought Election Ads In France And Germany

German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg.

Frank Rumpenhorst / AFP / Getty Images

Facebook cannot say for certain whether profiles or pages connected to Russia purchased ads during the French and German election campaigns, a company official told BuzzFeed News.

The official said Facebook has yet to dedicate substantial investigative resources to potential ad buys in the French and German election campaigns because it has been focused on the effort in the United States.

“We've been focused on the look back here in the US given the ongoing investigations by both the House and Senate Intelligence Committees, but also because of what the special is counsel is looking at as well,” said the official, who spoke on condition that they not be named.

This highlights how much remains unknown about possible Russian efforts to target voters with election ads in the US and elsewhere. Facebook has acknowledged that the more than 3,000 ads run in the US may not constitute all Russian-purchased messages. The company also can't say for sure whether or not similar ad purchases were made during the recent French or German elections.

Last week CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a Facebook live that the company has “not yet found a similar type of effort in Germany” when it comes to ads. The official echoed that, saying, “To date, we have found no significant coordination of ad buys or political misinformation targeting Germany from known clusters in Russia.”

One reason could be that as of now the company's resources are primarily focused on its investigative effort in the US. This is because “criminal and ongoing investigations [about the election] don't exist in other countries,” the official said.

The official emphasized that Facebook improved its ability to identify and remove fake accounts ahead of the French and German elections, which they said lowers the risk of interference. In April the company announced it had removed 30,000 fake accounts in France. In August, German media reported that Facebook had deleted “tens of thousands” of accounts prior to the start of federal elections.

However, Reuters later revealed that Russian intelligence agents created more than 20 Facebook accounts in France “to conduct surveillance on Macron campaign officials and others close to the centrist former financier as he sought to defeat far-right nationalist Marine Le Pen and other opponents in the two-round election.” That predated the account removals and raises questions about whether Russian agents or other entities may have bought ads to target voters prior to the removals.

David Ramos / Getty Images

In Germany, where the election ended on Sunday, politicians remain concerned about a lack of disclosure from Facebook regarding possible attempts to influence the vote.

Renate Künast, a member of German Parliament for the Greens who chairs the Committee of Legal Affairs and Consumer Protection, said the company's voluntary disclosures to date do not satisfy concerns about foreign ad buys and related issues.

“Facebook plays a new role for citizens comparing candidates. Therefore, voluntary reporting by Facebook is not enough,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Künast called on the company and the German Federal Office for Information Security to release more details about how they cooperated to thwart attempts to influence the election, and what they did and did not find.

A spokesman for the German Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection told BuzzFeed News it has not discussed or received information about possible Russian-bought election ads from Facebook. The spokesman said Facebook “should be [focused on ensuring] that its infrastructure is not misused by such ads.”

BuzzFeed News contacted the office of French President Emmanuel Macron for comment but did not receive a reply.

BuzzFeed Germany worked with Who Targets Me to crowdsource targeted political ads shown to Germans on Facebook during the election. The project gathered an estimated 800 political ads and did not identify any from questionable or Russian sources.

The Facebook official said ads bought by a known Russian troll farm in the US were part of a unique effort that appears to be different from what was seen in France and Germany.

“The Internet Research Agency accounts were connected and were acting in a coordinated fashion,” the official said. “In France those accounts violated Facebook policy when it comes to authenticity.”

Echoing the current mood in the US, Künast, the German politician, said Facebook's stepped-up efforts regarding security and misinformation may be too late to avoid regulation.

“Zuckerberg now, again, tries everything in the last minute to avoid any regulation. I think it is not so easy,” she said.

Quelle: <a href="Facebook Can't Say Whether Russians Bought Election Ads In France And Germany“>BuzzFeed

This Troll From Singapore Will Be Released From US Jail After Having His Asylum Upheld

Teen blogger Amos Yee speaks to reporters next to lawyer Nadarajan Kanagavijayan, after leaving a Singapore court in Sept. 2016.

Staff / Reuters

Amos Lee, a controversial blogger from Singapore who has been held in US detention for 10 months, will be freed on Tuesday after a federal appeals court upheld an immigration judge's decision to grant him asylum.

According to Yee's lawyer Sandra Grossman, the court upheld a judge's earlier ruling on the grounds that he would be persecuted if he returned to his native country, whose laws allow the government to restrict freedom of speech and expression. Yee had previously been jailed twice in Singapore on charges that included spreading obscenity and “wounding racial or religious feelings” before he flew to Chicago in December, where he was detained at O'Hare Airport.

He had been in US Custody ever since, despite a March ruling from Chicago immigration judge Samuel Cole that noted that Yee had showed that “he suffered past persecution on account of his political opinion and has a well-founded fear of future persecution in Singapore.” The Department of Homeland Security opposed that ruling, sending the case to appeals court, which ruled last Thursday that Yee should be freed.

The appeals court upheld the judge's original decision that “found that his prosecution in Singapore was actually pretext to silence his political opinion,” Grossman said in an interview with BuzzFeed News.

BuzzFeed News interviewed Yee for a story last month that chronicled his work as an online agitator who often ran into trouble for expressing his views on religion, Singapore's government, and sex. “I do confess I display similarities to a troll,” he said in a July interview. “And I do want attention. But a troll has sadistic pleasures. I want to help humans.”

Grossman said that the 18-year-old Yee would be released from a Chicago Immigration and Customs Enforcement office on Tuesday, but that she was unaware of his immediate plans. Per US law, he will be able to apply for a green card after being in the country for more than a year. Grossman also said it was unlikely that the government would take the case to a higher court to oppose Yee's asylum, alluding to the amount of money that has already been spent on an individual that the DHS “never argued” was a security threat.

“I can imagine that he looks forward to getting back online and expressing his views on a variety of topics including the government of Singapore, his detention in the United States and possibly any other topic that he wants to discuss,” she said.

Quelle: <a href="This Troll From Singapore Will Be Released From US Jail After Having His Asylum Upheld“>BuzzFeed