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Facebook's Zuckerberg to meet conservatives on political bias flap

Published 05/15/2016, 04:44 PM
Updated 05/15/2016, 05:00 PM
© Reuters. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks on stage during the Facebook F8 conference in San Francisco, California
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(Reuters) - Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg will meet this week with prominent conservatives in the media, a spokesman said on Sunday, to address allegations of political bias at the popular social networking site.

Some 12 "conservative thought leaders" will join the meeting with Zuckerberg on Wednesday, a Facebook spokesman said. Among the invitees are media personality Glenn Beck, Fox News Channel's "The Five" co-host Dana Perino and Zac Moffatt, co-founder of Targeted Victory, a technology company that aims to bring transparency to media buying.

Facebook came under fire last week when an unnamed former employee told technology news website Gizmodo that workers often omitted conservative political stories from the company's "trending" list of topics.

Zuckerberg said Facebook has "found no evidence that this report is true," but would continue to investigate. A U.S. Senate committee has also opened an inquiry into Facebook's practices.

Beck, a former Fox News host, took to Facebook early Sunday to say he is going to the meeting in Menlo Park, California, and "it would be interesting to look him (Zuckerberg) in the eye as he explains."

"While they are a private business and I support their right to run it any way they desire without government interference," Beck said, "it would be wonderful if a tool like face book (sic) INDEPENDENTLY CHOSE to hold up Freedom of speech and freedom of association as a corporate principle."

On Friday, Facebook outlined its "Trending Topics" guidelines in its media relations section and stated that reviewers are neither allowed nor advised to discriminate against sources.

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Facebook, now valued at around $350 billion, has become a bigger source of news for its more than 1 billion daily active users. Sixty-three percent of users, or 41 percent of all U.S. adults, say they get news from the site, according to a study last year by the Pew Research Center and the Knight Foundation.

Latest comments

The political media "chickens" have come home to roost. It was president Regan and his neocon conservative cronies who were responsible for scrapping the Fairness In Broadcast Doctrine in the early 1980s. This was a broadcast standard conceived in the 1950s by both political parties to be implemented by the FCC to ensure the networks would broadcast political opinions "in the public interest". That is to give all sides of a political issue fair airtime so the people could decide for themselves. It prevented just the thing those same conservatives are whining about today. Since the FIBC was scrapped our news media has no integrity. TV, radio, newspapers, magazines and the internet all say what they want irregardless of the truth in pursuit of whatever narrative they choose to slog.
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