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Sheera Frenkel, Cecilia Kang: An Ugly Truth (Paperback, 2021, Harper) 4 stars

Review of 'An Ugly Truth' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book was tough to read at this time. I just couldn't get away from all the bad because it's been in this book and in the news pretty steadily over the past weeks. Coincidentally, I've been reading this book at the same time a whistleblower brought the internal documents proving that FB doesn't really care about anything but engagement, which is much better to liken to addiction. The comparison to big tobacco seems pretty accurate (from the whistleblower, not the book).

Essentially, Zuckerberg wants the appearance that Facebook is taking concerns about election interference and increases in teen suicide and calls to violence on his platform seriously, but he doesn't actually want to do anything about it because doing something would affect engagement and therefore the bottom line.

One item of interest comes from the GOP's line of attack toward FB. By claiming that FB favors liberal content and silences conservative voices, they have forced the platform to the right. It's hard to say that FB silences conservative voices when seven of the ten most shared articles come from conservative news sources, mostly Fox.

I agree with the whistleblower's suggestion that Section 230 should be modified to exempt algorithms from lawsuits. Facebook and other social media might be a lot more careful about what their algorithms amplify if they knew they'd get sued for amplifying lies and disinformation. Personally, I'd like to see FB go back to a chronological timeline. And, it might not hurt if Facebook eliminated sharing posts. Users can't share posts in Instagram, and Instagram is still quite popular. Finally, no more political ads. Criminey, we get enough as it is. The election cycle never ends.

Let's go back to the days where folks updated Facebook with information about their eating habits and family parties.