Mark Zuckerberg says he is worried about an erosion of truth. He doesnt believe pulling back on expression in times of tension is the right road for a democracy to take. And he thinks people should not have to live in a world where they can say only things that technology companies judge to be accurate.
All three concerns are well-founded. But they do not, as Facebooks chief executive claims, mean that Facebook must publish deliberate and damaging falsehoods in political advertising.
Mr. Zuckerberg spoke at Georgetown University last week to defend his companys decision to allow campaigns to pay to have their lies promoted. The principles underlying the talk were noble. But they also avoided the essential question which isnt whether Facebook should be generous toward political speech, but whether it should allow even the most obviously untruthful content unlimited reach, as well.
Certainly a private company should not be deciding what the public can see from its leaders. Thats why Facebook should, and does, allow candidates to say pretty much whatever they want in everyday posts. But with ads, Facebook is offering candidates a helping hand, not an even one. The site is accepting money to bump up posts in the feeds of carefully targeted groups of users. This is a recipe for deception and polarization especially because incendiary topics are already known to garner more engagement, and then another visibility boost in turn.
THESE MECHANICS dismantle Mr. Zuckerbergs protestations that his company must remain neutral: Facebook isnt neutral right now. And whichever campaign is most willing to distort so far this year, it is President Trumps will most reap the benefits of the sites algorithmic biases.
Its unsurprising that Facebook would rather not put itself in the position of telling Mr. Trump no. Conservatives are already nipping at its heels over nonexistent censorship, threatening to legislate limits on treasured legal protections. And while Facebook has proved it can police political ads for profanity, truthfulness is trickier to evaluate.
Still, television networks and newspapers alike have met this challenge. Calling a candidate corrupt is acceptable; circulating a widely debunked defamatory hoax shouldnt be. Facebooks rules will have to be both nuanced and consistent, and squabbles are likely to arise in local races and national ones alike. The firm has been touting an oversight board. Why not have its members help out here, with full transparency and streamlined appeals? Even adding fact-checking labels to ads, as Facebook announced Monday it would do more prominently with other content, would be better than nothing.
Mr. Zuckerberg during his speech recounted Chinas attempts to export its aggressive censorship: Is that the Internet we want? Of course its not. But we also dont want an Internet where the way to win an election is to fabricate. The country shouldnt have to choose between those two options.