back to article Zuckerberg admits Biden administration pressured Meta to police COVID posts

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is giving ammunition to conspiracy theorists with a letter to the House Judiciary Committee in which he claims the Biden administration pressured his company on multiple occasions to censor posts related to COVID-19. The letter penned by Zuckerberg, published on X and Facebook by the House Judiciary …

  1. MrRtd

    Disagree. The government was right to pressure them. This just makes Zuck look like an idiotic heartless bastard that's okay with all death Covid and covid-adjacent conspiracies and misinformation caused.

    1. Mark 85

      Well, what did anyone expect? He's just a greedy self-centered ass who only cares about the money he makes.

      1. Woodnag

        "Ultimately, it was our decision whether or not to take content down..." Zuckerberg said.

        So not exactly pressure, then. Z was asked, and he agreed.

    2. StudeJeff

      On this side of the pond we have this thing called the "First Amendment", which protects our freedom of speech, even, and especially speech the government doesn't approve of.

      The government was WAY out of line "pressuring" social media companies to shut down or restrict speech the government didn't like... and it was pressure like the mobster saying to a shop keeper "nice business you have here, it would be a shame if anything happened to it". Except instead of something like a Molotov cocktail through the window it would be a horde of IRS and Dept. of "Justice" agents.

      1. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

        Isn't that strictly limited to forbidding Congress from passing laws affecting free speech?

        1. Ken Hagan Gold badge

          IANAL, or even a USA-ian, but I'm fairly sure that commentards here have stated that the Supreme Court has previously ruled that although the text says only "Congress" it should be construed to apply to pretty much anyone acting on behalf of the government, including State-level institutions and officials.

          Having said that, the same legal system has established that your right to free speech does not extend to shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theatre (or theater, I suppose, in this context) so it would be an interesting legal toss-up to see whether Meta could be pressurised into taking down posts that were likely to spread life-threatening disinformation.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            "the same legal system has established that your right to free speech does not extend to shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theatre"

            Its a grey area.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shouting_fire_in_a_crowded_theater

          2. Woodnag

            Fire!

            Actually it is legal to shout "Fire!" in a crowded theatre. Hate speech is also legal. The exception to the 4A is speech that incites immediate violence. So "I wish Fred would die painfully" to a bunch of friends is fine, but saying to a crowd "I want y'all to go and beat Fred over there to death" is not.

            https://www.whalenlawoffice.com/blog/legal-mythbusting-series-yelling-fire-in-a-crowded-theater/

          3. Paul Stimpson

            As I understand it, please pardon this non-USian if I'm wrong, the 1st Amendment only says that the Government cannot restrict someone from saying anything they choose. It doesn't say the person can't be punished as a result of the thing they said. If it did, it would be legal for someone to come up to you and make threats of violence.

            1. jilocasin

              close

              the first amendment is limited to govt. action, that includes the federal, state, local, and any agents working for them. it also prohibits indirect as well as direct threats. that's what at stake here. some members of the govt. know that they can't legally force a company to remove speech they don't like, so they will do so indirectly. from the "it would be a shame if these many govt. agents hounded your company for years and cost you tens of millions of dollars to comply with their obviously nonsense requests unless you take down those posts, to a case in New York state, where the govt. threatened banks and financial institutions with ruinous actions unless they stopped doing business with the NRA.

              both are highly illegal under the first amendment.

            2. Phil Koenig

              "Paul Stimpson" wrote:

              ...please pardon this non-USian if I'm wrong...

              Just an actual USian upvoting your comment because of the use of "USian" - since I happen to think calling ourselves "American" is kind of obnoxious.

          4. jilocasin
            Boffin

            actually you CAN shout Fire! in a crowded theater

            the first amendment protects lots of speech, speech that would give folks on the other side of the pond fits and nightmares. this includes what some might call hate speech, racist speech, anti-religious speech etc.

            SCOTUS has ruled in a couple of instances that the first amendment applies to govt. (federal, state, and local) and applies both directly and indirectly. ex: you can't make a law banning nor favoring certain speech, you can't pressure individuals with an actual or implied threat for their use or refusal to use ( like "pronouns" ) certain speech.

            also, the old "can't shout fire in a crowed theater" trope is just that, a trope and one that's been debunked years and years ago. unfortunately many people like to trot it out in an attempt to claim that the first amendment doesn't protect everything so 'their' proposed restriction of the first amendment is just fine.

            there are a couple of very narrow things that the first amendment doesn't protect, such as CSAM and threats of imminent violence, but they are very few and very narrow.

            there are lots of sites debunking tropes like this and listing the actual limitation on the first amendment.

            here's one: https://www.thefire.org/news/reminder-about-shouting-fire-crowded-theater

            good luck.

      2. Flocke Kroes Silver badge

        Aim that blame thrower

        It is called COVID 19 because it started in 2019 even though it did not become a popular illness until 2020. Don-Old was president until January 2021. Facebook was busy taking down COVID misinformation in 2020. If that was in the wake of government pressure then the pressure came from Don-Old. Apparently the past changes to suit Zuckerberg's profits. Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.

        1. AJ MacLeod

          Re: Aim that blame thrower

          The article specifically states that the government pressure was in 2021 and from the Biden administration - how much clearer would you like it?

          1. codejunky Silver badge

            Re: Aim that blame thrower

            @AJ MacLeod

            "The article specifically states that the government pressure was in 2021 and from the Biden administration - how much clearer would you like it?"

            With that little fact in mind Flocke Kroes post currently has 33 upvotes for that mis/mal/wrong information against 8 down. Also interesting is someone leaving you a down vote without any explanation.

          2. Flocke Kroes Silver badge

            Re: Aim that blame thrower

            The article quotes Zuckerberg. Zuckerberg has free speech and can post lies on social media pretty much with impunity. According to Zuckerberg Facebook reduced the spread of COVID misinformation in the wake of government pressure. Facebook reduced the spread of COVID misinformation in 2020. Either Zuckerberg is a liar or the government pressure came from the Trump administration. We already have a court ruling throwing out Zuckerberg's complaint because Facebook chose to restrict COVID misinformation long before the Biden administration had any opportunity to apply pressure. Please look more carefully at who is speaking and if what they say corresponds to the historical timeline. The time to really put effort into this is when the speaker starts by saying things you already believe in an attempt to become a trusted source. After that they can tack lies onto the end and be believed.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: Aim that blame thrower

              Just cos Trump was in power doesn't mean the instruction came from him. What we have learned from the Twitter files is that there are groups within the US govt who were working in their own interest and from other evidence we know that some were actively working against Trump. The call to supress the laptop story came from people in the Biden campaign. There is a well documented revolving door between govt and big tech/pharma/agri/mil and you always want to help out someone who you might be working with down the road.

              What we saw with the media, pretty much from Trump's announcement he was running was a very coordinated effort to undermine him. This then morphed into an extreme gaslighting effort to hide Joe Biden's obvious cognitive issues in the run up to 2020 and pretty much up until 2 months ago. And just recently the whole 'joy' thing. Very similar articles and reports from all the media, almost as if they are being told what to say.

              1. Casca Silver badge

                Re: Aim that blame thrower

                Hard to gaslight what trump is saying or doing when he does such a good job of acting the corrupt moron on his own.

        2. EricB123 Silver badge

          Re: Aim that blame thrower

          I guess Zuck never heard about ex president who allegedly forgave a high ranking Canadian official that all was forgiven for burning down the White House in 1814. This despite Canada as we know it today was not yet a thing in 1814,

      3. Lars
        Happy

        @StudeJeff

        Let's remember that freedom of speech doesn't force anybody to publish that speech. Kindly suggesting a company does not publish the worst drivel is not against the "First Amendment".

      4. Malcolm Weir

        This "understanding" of the First Amendment is pretty daft.

        Sure, had the government tried to do the things you allege (e.g. threaten IRS action), there would be issues, but literally no-one except the tin-foil conspiracy nutters allege that that happened. The First Amendment has always had "consequences for speech", which is what we're talking about here: the government is asking Zuckerberg to take action i.e. provide consequences for speech. No-one is getting prosecuted for speaking, no-one is getting IRS audits, no-one is losing any money (except perhaps Zuck, but that's a big "perhaps" because if a social media site were to be known to be truthful and honest it would attract better, therefore higher paying, advertisers).

      5. ecofeco Silver badge

        The 1st Amendment does not, and never has, allowed for information that harms people.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          you sure about that.

          if that was anywhere near true, orange shit bag would be in prison for centuries

          1. ecofeco Silver badge

            A sad but good point.

            He should have been long before he ran for president, but alas, here we are.

        2. jilocasin
          Coat

          sorry you are mistaken

          it always has, it still does, and it always will.

          do try to keep up.

          1. ecofeco Silver badge

            Re: sorry you are mistaken

            Keep up indeed.

            https://www.britannica.com/topic/First-Amendment/Permissible-restrictions-on-expression

            https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/limits-free-speech

            Anything else to add, Birdman lawyer?

      6. Jamie Jones Silver badge
        FAIL

        What a surprise that someone who sneers about having free speech doesn't even understand the concept of free speech, or even, hell, the first amendment he's wanking over.

        Instead of showing off about how you think it's your right to endanger someones life by lying to them about health matters, maybe you should focus on the real issues of freedom, and why America actually ranks quite low.

        https://freedomhouse.org/countries/freedom-world/scores?sort=desc&order=Total%20Score%20and%20Status

        P.S. Try shouting "I have a bomb" at JFK airport, and see how far your "free speech" gets you.

        1. jilocasin
          Coat

          poor example

          threats of inciting imminent violence have always been an exception to the first amendment.

          but thanks for playing.

          1. Jamie Jones Silver badge
            Facepalm

            Re: poor example

            I know it has. That was my point.

            However, I notice an earlier exchange:

            eco wrote: "The 1st Amendment does not, and never has, allowed for information that harms people."

            You replied: "sorry you are mistaken. it always has, it still does, and it always will. do try to keep up."

            I suggest asking your doctor (if you can afford one) about upping your meds (if you can afford them)

            Oh, here's another story about a guy in America being arrested for what the earlier guy (and you in an earlier incarnation) called "free speech". https://youtu.be/0IS-LFAE6bc

            By the way, it's somewhat ironic that you've got Brits defending the constitution for not being as bat-shit crazy as some of you guys think.

      7. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        no it was prudent to pressure fuckwits into doing the right thing.

        rather than allow fuckwits to keep spreading bollocks that endangered everyone, not just the fucking insane right wing loonatics telling you to self medicate with horse wormer followed with a bleach chaser.

        fucking crazy Americans

        1. fg_swe Silver badge

          Sure, AC

          We must never criticize the WHO and the media bought by Pharma investors. Can't do that to these nice persons.

    3. BasicReality

      The government has no right to interfere with free speech.

      1. My-Handle

        How about when that speech is directly or indirectly causing harm or death? Sounds like a good idea to try limiting it then. It's not an absolute, unalienable right.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Based on whos truth ?

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            - on truths from elected officials. Undermining western institutions is very typical for foreign bots.

            Institutions are everything, because they enable consolidated action in any country. Destruction of institutions is the way to chaos.

            1. fg_swe Silver badge

              If that ACTUALLY is a problem, display a national flag next to each post.

              Then we can see who is an Ivan.

              Of course label VPN exit routers with a special flag.

          2. Grogan Silver badge

            Based on correct information. Your ignorance is not as good as our knowledge, chuckles.

        2. LybsterRoy Silver badge

          "directly " fine limit it

          "indirectly " much more a grey area - how indirect?

        3. jilocasin
          Meh

          depending on who's making the speech, what speech "exactly" they are making and what the supposed 'death or harm' is, in most cases it's perfectly legal.

          a company selling bleach as a cure all with instruction to ingest liberally, would probably be limited. commercial speech gets limited protection and the harm is immediate and obvious.

          an organization stating that COVID-19 is no more dangerous than the common cold, it's not commercial, the speech is subject to interpretation, there is no immediate nor concrete harms, it's protected by the first amendment.

          an individual states that there are only two biological sexes and that people can't change their sex, it's non-commercial, factual, any harms are to someone's feelings. definitely protected by the first amendment.

          so "...directly or indirectly causing harm or death..." isn't the clear cut win you seem to think that it is.

          1. Phil Koenig

            Personal Facts

            "jilocasin" wrote:

            there are only two biological sexes

            This has NEVER been true, you need to find a better example.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersex

            And in fact any virologist will tell you that Covid IS much more dangerous than the common cold as well. The fact that some people get it and have no longstanding negative impacts doesn't disprove that, any more than the fact that your brother didn't die after getting a heart attack "proves" that heart attacks are not dangerous and often fatal.

            That's 0 for 2 then.

            Tho I'm not actually disagreeing that there ARE some things that reasonable people can disagree upon. For example: "Green is a better color than blue".

            Now let's talk about "corporations as people" when it comes to their so-called "free speech rights"...

            1. jilocasin
              Boffin

              Re: Personal Facts (sorry there are only 2 sexes in mammals)

              If you are going to try to make an argument from authority, you should probably choose one that's not been taken over by ideologies and activists.

              There are exactly two sexes in mammals, of which humans are. There are females, large gamete producers and males, small gamete producers. In healthy humans females have no Y chromosomes (overwhelmingly XX) and males do (overwhelmingly XY). The fact that there are genetic disorders effecting a tiny minority of individuals, those possessing a DSD a disorder of sexual development, doesn't change that fact. Almost all DSD conditions are also themselves sexed, meaning a person with a DSD still has one of two sexes. Sufferers of Klinefelter syndrome are still male, those of Turner syndrome are still female.

              If you believe that healthy humans come in any sex other than female or male, please list them out for the class. While you are at it please provide examples in healthy gorillas, zebra, lions, field mice, and blue whales, remember we are all mammals and any sex a human supposedly comes in every other mammal on the planet does as well.

              Your second debunking is again a failed appeal to authority, while a majority of virologists would agree that COVID-19 is more dangerous than a cold, there are some that disagree. Which is a big part of the parent article. Virologists tried posting their opinion that COVID-19 wasn't that dangerous and had their posts removed at government insistence. If you need to silence your opposition in order to 'win' your argument, then you don't have much of an argument. A lay person who experienced COVID-19 with nothing more than the sniffles has the right to say so, and their statement is protected by the first amendment. If you reread my post, I didn't claim that COVID-19 was no more dangerous than a cold, but that the opinion that is was is protected.

              So sorry, that's two out of two for me.

              Thanks for playing.

              1. Phil Koenig

                Re: Personal Facts (sorry there are only 2 sexes in mammals)

                @jilocasin

                I think a lot of intersex people would not be particularly happy about how those like yourself categorize them as a "disorder" - especially since a significant proportion of humanity is born that way.

                In fact this "disorder" is apparently so upsetting to so many parents of such children in western cultures that it's been common practice for many years now to choose to surgically mangle their sometimes "ambiguous" genitalia to meet their idea of "normality" before the poor children are in a position to understand what is actually going on. Many of such children grow up to be rather disturbed by that parental decision that they had no control over at the time. And this little "secret" doesn't get discussed in public much because of the perceived stigma associated with it.

                Whereas many other cultures around the world have taken an accomodating approach for thousands of years to these relatively common "disorders" by creating a place in society for them. (The term for this gender category in Native American cultures varies by tribe but in recent years an umbrella term that embraces all of them has been created, because it is so common: "Two spirit")

                Our binary-gender-obsessed societies that embraced Abrahammic concepts of gender seem to be the main issue here.

                And I think that's a problem.

          2. ecofeco Silver badge

            ...an organization stating that COVID-19 is no more dangerous than the common cold, it's not commercial, the speech is subject to interpretation

            No, it isn't, ya numpty.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Free speech - YES. Free reach - NO. Nobody is holding you from hosting cheaply a web-site and post whatever you want. But alas, suddenly nobody wants to read you. Sorry about that. How Truth Social is doing? Every social network can decide what is allowed or not. Somehow non-credible web-sites quickly lose readers. Wonder why?

        Would you like to sue GMail for filtering spam? It is similar. What about sharing porn on Facebook? "But but, it is different". No! It is not. Free speech or not by your logic.

        It is possible to paralyze a network or the whole society by overwhelming them with noise. Some influencers are busy doing just that - generating advertisement revenue by publishing nonsense every few hours. Typically those are rumors, doubts, conspiracy theories. Not analysis with references to credible sources, mind you. No wonder, the smart China explicitly bans them.

        It is worse than that. Many Western politicians are paralyzed from acting due to fake, or foreign-manipulated "public opinion".

        1. fg_swe Silver badge

          Telegram eats Zucks business.

          1. Malcolm Weir

            French government eats Telegram.

            1. ecofeco Silver badge

              *snerk*

              Well played. Have my upvote.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Or Telegrams is a hybrid tool by Russia to spread drugs and facilitate organized crime.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              And this should be restricted to US corporations, as God intended...

        2. LybsterRoy Silver badge

          But many politicians are not "paralyzed from acting due to fake, or foreign-manipulated "public opinion"." but because they don't have functional brain cells

      3. Jamie Jones Silver badge

        "Advocacy of force or criminal activity does not receive First Amendment protections if (1) the advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action, and (2) is likely to incite or produce such action."

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imminent_lawless_action

    4. AJ MacLeod

      The Government was entirely wrong to pressure them - as we now know, the majority of Government "facts" which were ruthlessly pushed were completely false and much of the so-called "misinformation" that was being censored was in fact true.

      1. oreosRnice

        Yup.

        Doesn’t help that numerous things being label as conspiracies or misinformation. Are actually being proven to be correct. Regardless of the truth the government has no right to ever censor any form of speech. If it’s labeled as harmful to individuals or groups. Then those individuals and groups should remove themselves from areas where they’re being harmed.

        To censor one group but not others is tyrannical.

        1. DryBones

          Except they weren't. They were repeatedly disproven. I'd write "nice try" but it wasn't.

          "Censoring one group but not the other is tyrannical": Hi Mr "My lies are as good as your truth."

          1. LybsterRoy Silver badge

            Lots of times "disproven" means that I shouted louder and longer than you" or "yes you have actual hard facts but what about the lived experience"

            Selective censoring is tyrannical. But I feel your final sentence proves my statement above.

        2. Jamie Jones Silver badge

          You two are both prime examples of *WHY* there need to be controls.

          No-one would care if Alex Jones babbled his crap if it wasn't for the fact that people like you believe the bullshit.

          There is a thing called "duty of care".

    5. TheMeerkat Silver badge

      The government has no right to police people discussing issues, this includes Covid.

      If you think otherwise, you would love to live in North Korea or Nazi Germany.

      It is appalling how many people want the government to impose restrictions on our lives while banning any criticism. It is not surprising that totalitarian regimes are so easy to establish.

      1. Lars
        Unhappy

        " It is not surprising that totalitarian regimes are so easy to establish."

        If Trump gets re-elected then that is sadly true.

  2. Joe W Silver badge

    Words fail me...

    ... at least I would rather not write the vernaculars I'm currently thinking of. Timing is great, isn't it?

    Fact is thatthat we're were many posts about CoViD that were just... misinformation, like the US president spread when he proposed to inject bleach (seriously....). Removing this kind of garbage is necessary. Sorry. No, your right to free speech ends where it harms others. If (a)social networks don't get stuff done they really need some encouragement.

    Yeah, I do expect downvotes, but hey, free speech...

    1. Charlie Clark Silver badge

      Re: Words fail me...

      This isn't about how crazy the posts were, but who decides whether they can stay up or not. From what I know this is not the jurisdiction of the US government so, for better or worse, this should be down to the courts (and possibly the FCC), with Facebook and Co. being held liable (currently the DMCA gives them some degree of exemption) for the content, as is the case in other countries.

      I'll note in passing that in Germany, the phrase "pandemic of anti-vaxxers" (and this is not some obscure group of Data General fans), which was popularised by the Federal Health Minister from 2021 onwards, was disputed by the experts at the time as factually inaccurate, and may also end up before the courts.

      I'm all in favour of vaccination but stand by most of the criticism of many of the policies enacted around the world by various governments, who frequently resembled headless chickens. There were plenty of idiots on both sides who were keen to ignore established, and therefore tried and tested) epidemic protocols, and the evidence about the source and spread of this or other viruses. We still have the opportunity to learn lessons but I suspect that, within 5 years, most of those lessons will be down in that basement filing cabinet behind the door with the "Beware of the leopard" sign!

      1. hoola Silver badge

        Re: Words fail me...

        The wider issue here is that minority views get coverage that is disproportionate to their content.

        That is the one of the side effects of Social Media. The outcome is that completely inappropriately or wrong information becomes fact as total chimps decide that a vocal nobody with 100,00 shares or likes is more relevant than an official statement.

        Social media has become a total curse on society, there is no responsibility from many who post, consume and the corporations that run them refusing to realise that moderation is essential in a civilised society.

        The views of one very rich personality as a figurehead have more sway than any authority that is trying to get unacceptable material removed.

        If you want sick violence, beheadings, drugs or guns then go onto the dark web, It should not be available on something that is deemed a civilised resource.

        1. LybsterRoy Silver badge

          Re: Words fail me...

          I upvoted you but is censorship really the answer to the problem or is it that people are no longer taught to think for themselves - much more difficult to fix.

      2. Malcolm Weir

        Re: Words fail me...

        Oh, that's easy. The article makes it clear who makes the "stay up or go" decision. It's the publisher.

      3. Phil Koenig

        Re: Words fail me...

        "Charlie Clark" wrote:

        ...policies enacted around the world by various governments, who frequently resembled headless chickens. There were plenty of idiots on both sides who were keen to ignore established, and therefore tried and tested) epidemic protocols, and the evidence about the source and spread of this or other viruses."

        In fact, it took quite a long while before the actual experts figured out all the details of this new disease, and much of the "conventional wisdom" was wrong.

        For example, it took the better part of a year or more to convincingly conclude that all the hysteria about sanitizing surfaces everywhere was a waste of time, and that probably 95% of transmission was occurring via aerial droplets instead. Here in the USA all suppllies of surface santizing products evaporated for 1-2 years on store shelves because of all the initial panic about that. But the scientists had to do extensive tests - all while the virus was continuously mutating - to figure this out. It was not possible to know at first.

        Another major problem here were the politics where tons of unfortunately influential science-deniers (including corporate interests that wanted their workers to work in unsafe conditions and bitterly partisan politicians which wanted to create false controversies any time they thought they could single out their political adversaries for "restricting our freedumb") were applying heavy pressure against government-suggested practices like mask-wearing and social isolation of infected people. (Policies which were later convincingly proven to cut down on the spread of the virus and save lives)

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Words fail me...

          Ah yes, the infamous Fauci 'dwoplets'. It was quite a while before they admitted that aerosols could carry it. It is as if the scientific community had a blonde moment and forgot that the common cold and flu are both aerosol spreadable. It was 2 years before the WHO admitted to aerosol transmission and no-one was willing to contradict the WHO. It wasn't just politicians and corporate types being science deniers.

          Here in the UK we had some utterly batshit crazy 'science' whereby if you were sat down it was safe to remove your mask yet if you stood up you had to put it on. The covid somehow floated over you while you were sat down. Also somehow covid would be stopped by a t-shirt mask.....

          I saw a person in the supermarket pull down their mask, lick their finger and rub their toddlers face. Another person was wearing those cheap 'surgical' style gloves, was stood waiting to pay and was picking at their teeth with their gloved finger.

          1. Phil Koenig

            Re: Words fail me...

            Cowardly Person wrote:

            It was quite a while before they admitted that aerosols could carry it.

            No one had to "admit" anything because they were not hiding anything.

            The great thing about science is that it is inherently anti-dogmatic.

            In the ideological dogma cesspool, people are forced to "admit" things all the time because they never bothered to check the veracity of the things they choose to believe in. And then get caught with their pants down. A lot.

            Scientists do not have this problem because they do not claim that something is a certain way until they see proof of this. Usually multiple times, under carefully controlled, repeatable experimental conditions. (Technically, enough times to be statistically significant)

            Pretty cool, huh?

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: Words fail me...

              Are you sure?

              https://www.bmj.com/content/385/bmj.q985

              "Many insisted the spread of the new virus was through the air, yet the World Health Organization refused to use the terms “airborne” or “aerosol”1 in the context of covid-19 until 2021"

              https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/a-fight-about-viruses-in-the-air-is-finally-over-now-its-time-for-healthy/

              "The great thing about science is that it is inherently anti-dogmatic."

              Sorry but LOL! Scientists, especially those funded by governments or big pharma/corp are hugely dogmatic. We just have to look at the work of Ancel Keys who concluded that saturated fat was the cause of many health problems and not huge amounts of hidden sugar. It just happened he was funded by the sugar lobby.

              Doctors were threatened with having their medical licenses revoked if they didn't fall in line with the correct narrative on covid.

              https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7125703/

              In 2004 they list every well known respiratory virus as airborne. You even admit the dogma in your previous post "hysteria about sanitizing surfaces everywhere was a waste of time". Its as if everyone went stupid and decided to start from scratch rather than rely on decades of previous work.

              1. Phil Koenig

                Re: Words fail me...

                Cowardly Person wrote:

                [Phil Koenig] "The great thing about science is that it is inherently anti-dogmatic." [/Phil Koenig]

                Sorry but LOL! Scientists, especially those funded by governments or big pharma/corp are hugely dogmatic.

                What I wrote is what I meant.

                Science IS inherently anti-dogmatic. Bear in mind that I did not claim that science is "dogma proof". See below.

                Now if we turn to religious, mystical or traditional beliefs (including the modern form called "magical thinking"), there is literally no need whatsoever to verify the veracity of ANY claim. In fact, MANY of these belief-systems literally preach that when a person feels skeptical of the ideology's claims, THAT'S A PROOF THAT THE CLAIMS ARE TRUE". LOL.

                Whereas science provides the tools - if the practice is properly followed - to resist ideological manipulation of the results and present them in a way which can easily be independently verified - in order to facilitate an earned confidence and trust in those results. Again: "if the process is properly followed".

                But cynical and dishonest people have a way of expending great efforts to corrupt all sorts of things that provide the tools to be corruption and dogma resistant, by twisting the process, lying about how they came to their conclusion and using that to trick gullible people.

                Unfortunately many people do not know how to determine if the scientific process was properly followed, verified and documented. Or, their various forms of societal conditioning or just plain old mental laziness leads them to gravitate towards the potentially more emotionally satisfying magical-thinking alternatives instead.

                The "faith" ideologies literally brainwash people to be "critical thinking resistant", and proper science does the actual opposite.

        2. Charlie Clark Silver badge

          Re: Words fail me...

          Not sure which studies you were looking at, but in Europe the spread via aerosols was determined in spring 2020. By which time it was also established that children, somewhat unusually, were not acting as vectors, but policies worldwide insisted on taking and keeping children out of school for well over a year and . Comorbidity factors (age, gender, obesity, heart and kidney conditions) were also established fairly quickly and could, and should have been used to improve protection for the most vulnerable.

          Studies regarding mask-wearing were not conclusive: I could point to the Cochrane report, but this is known to be controversial. Basically, in future pandemics, we've got 8 - 12 weeks when general restricitive policies can be helpful, after that it's about protecting the vulnerable, triage and vaccination.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Words fail me...

            The way little kids were treated during the pandemic was horrible. Especially in the USA. This was another one of the dogmatic things that went on.

            Forcing kids to wear masks, keeping them away from friends and interaction with other people, the whole 'you will kill grandma' scaremongering. A large number of children are developmentally stunted due to this and some even have irrational fears about human to human interaction.

            https://www.bbc.com/news/education-53097289

            And in the UK the way we protected the most vulnerable was to empty hospitals by sending known covid cases to nursing homes and we all know the outcome of that. And sadly this was not restricted to the UK as a number of US states did the same.

            1. Charlie Clark Silver badge
              Thumb Up

              Re: Words fail me...

              Yes, despite evidence that lockdowns were the most destructive and least effective of the policies employed, they stuck around because they pandered to the sense of fear that many people. quite understandably, had; fear is not good counsellor. I'd throw in the mirage of the track and trace follies. Fortunately, however, one of the lasting innovations (along with some of the fantastic findings from the RECOVERY study) was checking the sewers for viral last. We're seeing this being put to good use in Gaza where it will hopefully help prevent a polio epidemic.

              And, of course, some of these policies helped deflect attention from glaring shortcomings in primary care which correlated unsurprisingly with higher mortality rates. I've no problem with people developing a culture of "we won't come this weekend because I/other/the children have a cold/flu…" or of people taking vaccination more seriously, but I would expect a return to the mean over the next few years.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Words fail me...

      Of course you should expect downvotes, because people like you are a huge part of the problem. I hate and despise Trump and there are quite a few people like me who are not on the left, but even your "fact" about him suggesting that people inject bleach is completely fake. Even the extreme left-leaning Snopes won't back this one up. I'm using Snopes as an example because they were the first search result I got looking for the exact quotes (which weren't in there, but I'm not going to keep digging). Here's what Snopes said happened:

      "During an April 2020 media briefing, Trump did ask members of the government's coronavirus task force to look into whether disinfectants could be injected inside people to treat COVID-19. But when a reporter asked in a follow-up question whether cleaning products like bleach and isopropyl alcohol would be injected into a person, the then-president said those products would be used for sterilizing an area, not for injections."

      https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/trump-bleach-covid-19/

      That's it. No, it's probably not the best plan to use bleach to sterilize an area for an injection, but if there was an emergency and nothing else was available (this was at a time when everyone was running out of everything) it doesn't rate as evil or malicious or outright stupid. It was an off-the-cuff response to a reporter who suggested injecting bleach (of course, Snopes won't go so far as to name the reporter - they aren't *that* interested in truth).

      So now that I'm done defending that pile of festering orange crap, let's move on to the reason it's still among us: people like you.

      You screech about "misinformation" while shamelessly repeating a stupid and very easily debunked outright lie, literally in the same sentence. You do it because you get off on gaslighting people who you despise. Sure, it's fun to watch awful people squirm. But while you're winding them up, you're doing two other things. First, you're helping to annihilate the credibility of your side to people who are undecided. So everything your side claims from The Science™ (which is getting fewer and fewer things right because it has an enormous corruption problem) down to the Earth is round (even Alex Jones can't stand the Flat Earthers) and birds are real comes into doubt with people who can't figure these things out for themselves, which is most of the human race. They use the huristic of "well, I understand this lie so everything else that person says is probably a lie." That's not even a dumb heuristic. It works pretty well most of the time. Secondly, people who do agree with your side in some areas become more unwilling to make common cause with you in those areas because you're outing yourselves as no smarter than the Trump supporters. You make yourselves look like just a different flavor of angry and stupid. It's deeply frustrating for people like me because both side absolutely suck. It would be nice to have a side that doesn't absolutely suck, but there is no such thing right now. Just remember this: you are not better than a Trump supporter. Maybe worse.

      1. cmdrklarg

        Re: Words fail me...

        The Snopes link does NOT say that it was "completely fake". "Mostly False" also means "Partly True".

        The Florida Orange Man said, quote:

        >>>>Right. And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that. So, that, you're going to have to use medical doctors with. But it sounds — it sounds interesting to me.

        And then:

        >>>>It wouldn't be through injection. We're talking about through almost a cleaning, sterilization of an area. Maybe it works, maybe it doesn't work. But it certainly has a big effect if it's on a stationary object.

        So yes, "inject bleach" is objectively false. "Maybe we can clean their lungs with disinfectant" is what I hear there. Mind you, I look at it as him being a very ignorant individual wondering out loud about something, and not that he was intending to be malicious about it. Either way, it is entirely fair game to give him shit about it. People have ended their political careers for doing a LOT less (Howard Dean, anyone?).

        >>>>It's deeply frustrating for people like me because both side absolutely suck. It would be nice to have a side that doesn't absolutely suck, but there is no such thing right now. Just remember this: you are not better than a Trump supporter. Maybe worse.

        I sympathize with you. However, it is quite clear to me that while one of the parties is pretty "meh" (if I'm being generous), the other one is a raging dumpster fire that is objectively looking to subvert our democracy at the behest of an asshole narcissist convicted felon con man. They are NOT the same.

        I am voting the same way I did in 2016 and 2020: the candidate that is best situated to defeat the Florida Orange Man. He belongs in the Big House, not in the White House.

        My $0.02, YMMV

        1. LybsterRoy Silver badge

          Re: Words fail me...

          You were doing so well until you reached this point "Either way, it is entirely fair game to give him shit about it." then the rants started - calm down, take some deep breaths and relax.

      2. DryBones

        Re: Words fail me...

        Please go study "innuendo" and "plausible deniability". It was the same sort of speech that the Orange Man always uses, weasely double-talk that from the strictest reading wasn't anything bad. But to anyone with actual sense is painfully obvious what was going on. It's Budget Mafiosi stuff, like all the rest of his act.

      3. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Words fail me...

        Pathetic response, MAGA cult member.

        Once you've stopped foaming at the mouth, watch the video of him speaking, and try to listen without your MAGA hat on, and try to explain what he supposedly did mean without this time sounding like chemical Ali, Kellyanne Conway, or brain-dead Kayleigh McEnany.

        Do yourself a favor, and seek reprograming.

        1. Lars
          Happy

          Re: Words fail me...

          "watch the video of him speaking".

          Yes all you have to do is to searh for "Trump bleach" on YouTube". Also note that when he finds out again he is an idiot he tries to claim it was only sarcasm.

          1. Phil Koenig

            Re: Words fail me...

            "Lars" wrote:

            Also note that when he finds out again he is an idiot he tries to claim it was only sarcasm.

            I first encountered this rhetorical tactic employed by one of my classmates when I was about 8 or 9 years old, when they made some really obnoxious remark, and myself or someone else called them out for it. "Ohh, it was just a JOKE, HURR DURR...!"

            And that's about the level of maturity that one expects from those who employ such childish attempts to escape culpability for making a blatantly self-promoting, false remark.

            But the sad thing is that this "genius tactic" seems to be on a steep rise in the USA the last 10 years or so, apparently supercharged by Mr. Orange Tinyhands bringing these manchild types out of the woodwork and telling them they're all actual geniuses.

  3. Zolko Silver badge

    the next one

    I need new conspiracy theories, all those I've believed-in have been proven correct.

    1. ecarlseen

      Re: the next one

      At this point we no longer call them "conspiracy theories." We call them "spoiler alerts."

    2. Steve Button Silver badge

      Re: the next one

      "giving ammunition to conspiracy theorists"

      Well I can see what angle this article is coming from. It's a shame.

      Just off the top of my head, a few "conspiracy theories" which have turned out to be true :-

      The Hunter Biden laptop*

      Possibly the Wuhan lab leak. WAS definitely a conspiracy theory, until it turned out to be likely true.

      The vaccines stop the spread.

      The Covid vaccines are safe (although the AZ one got quietly withdrawn because of blood clots)

      Masks work to stop you catching / spreading respiratory viruses.

      Lockdowns work

      * And that's the one that Zuck admitted he'd been warned about by the FBI.

      That's not to mention all the nasty well documented shit that the CIA got up to in South America and other countries, as well as MK Ultra and other drug experiments with soldiers.

      At this stage I'm still 80% sure that man DID land on the moon, but if it proves otherwise I don't think my world view will be shaken much.

      And the earth is not round. Or flat. More like spherical.

      Still feeling cynical and skeptical.

      1. AJ MacLeod

        Re: the next one

        Look at the downvotes... and the total lack of facts to refute your points. It seems from many centuries of evidence that the majority of people are fine with being lied to by the relevant authorities of the day, happy to avoid any kind of critical thinking of their own - and then crowd round and batter down anyone who dares to posit something that conflicts with the official "truth".

        1. Jason Bloomberg Silver badge
          Boffin

          Re: the next one

          Look at the downvotes... and the total lack of facts to refute your points.

          Probably because everyone is utterly tired of posting refutations, which everyone but conspiracy theorists understand, which conspiracy theorists won't ever accept.

          Most people have got better things to do than engage with conspiracy theorists and brainwashed tribalists.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: the next one

          i haven't got the fucking time to refute all the rancid dribble that appears from brain dead orange turd followers.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: the next one

            Translation: "I have no actual argument and am actually incapable of having an actual discussion but your opinion hurts my feels so I will resort to ad-hom attacks to make me feel better"

            1. Casca Silver badge

              Re: the next one

              Discussion? LMAO, maga muppets and their ilk dont want discussions. They want to sling their shit as far as possible

      2. Paul Crawford Silver badge

        Re: the next one

        You might want to actually read about the alleged laptop here, starting with "The owner of a Delaware computer shop, John Paul Mac Isaac, said that the laptop had been left by a man who identified himself as Hunter Biden. Mac Isaac also stated that he is legally blind and could not be sure whether the man was actually Hunter Biden" and then:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_Biden_laptop_controversy#Forensic_analysis

        As for Zuck, consider these two postulates:

        1) Is he a long standing principled individual who seeks the truth?

        2) Is he toadying to the MAGA lot to avoid any more scrutiny on his privacy-raping business model?

        I leave the application of Occam's razor to the reader.

        1. oreosRnice

          Re: the next one

          The laptop contents proved it was hunters. The FBI confirmed that Hunter Biden was the original owner and its contents verified to be true an unaltered. How is that not true ?

          1. Paul Crawford Silver badge

            Re: the next one

            It is the provenance of the laptop that is so suspicious:

            According to the New York Post story, a person—who Mac Isaac could not identify because he is legally blind—left the computer at the repair shop to repair water damage, but once this was completed, the shop had no contact information for its owner, and nobody ever paid for it or came to pick it up. Criticism focused on Mac Isaac over inconsistencies in his accounts of how the laptop came into his possession and how he passed it on to Giuliani and the FBI. When interviewed by CBS News, Mac Isaac offered contradictory statements about his motivations.

            So somebody hands in a laptop related to the democrats to a republican repair shop, that by a pure miracle can't identify who it was, and then it goes directly to Biden's arch-rival's attorney instead of just to the FBI. And you think it passes the smell test?

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: the next one

              The laptop was seized by the FBI in late 2019 long before Giuliani got involved. He was passed a copy in mid 2020.

              https://www.snopes.com/news/2020/10/15/hunter-biden-laptop-giuliani/

            2. codejunky Silver badge

              Re: the next one

              @Paul Crawford

              "So somebody hands in a laptop related to the democrats to a republican repair shop, that by a pure miracle can't identify who it was, and then it goes directly to Biden's arch-rival's attorney instead of just to the FBI. And you think it passes the smell test?"

              It went directly to the FBI who buried it. Evidence of serious crime vanishing into the void while the FBI were staging evidence against Trump. Then he handed it over to the republican lawyers to avoid being buried too.

              "And you think it passes the smell test?"

              The burying of the evidence and, once released, the states effort to discredit it does not pass the smell test at all. It also significantly demonstrated the difference in investigating Trump vs Biden

      3. DryBones

        Re: the next one

        So, 2 conspiracy fantasies and 4 truths, then.

        Come back when you're actually learned enough to understand why the last 4 are true.

        1. Steve Button Silver badge

          Re: the next one

          That's the point though, isn't it? You can't prove that any of those things are actually true or conspiracy theories. They are just opinions. I also can't prove that they are false, but given all the evidence I've seen I'm fairly convinced that, for instance, long term the lockdowns did not work to stop the spread. Except perhaps in China where they had a pretty strict Zero Covid policy for a long time, and eventually had to drop it because it was causing way more damage than it was helping.

          But let's not get into arguing about that. It's been done ad nauseum. We can disagree, and that's fine. It's not the point at all. The point is that those opinions would have been taken down or severely demoted by Facebook in 2020/21 because the US government was putting extreme pressure on Facebook to do so. Facebook didn't HAVE to comply, in the same way that the local baker didn't HAVE to comply when the Mafia came round and said "That's a nice shop you've got there, it would be a shame if anything happened to it"

          There are laws in place to prevent you from spreading actual damaging misinformation, as Alex Jones found out to his cost. But that doesn't mean the government should be allowed to shut down discussion of things that they find inconvenient or embarrassing.

          One day you'll have strong opinions about something which your government is doing. Who knows, perhaps this will be sooner than you think, after November? And perhaps when the boot is on the other foot you'll start to value free speech a bit more.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: the next one

            Every case brought against Alex Jones has been a private case for defamation. There hasn't actually been a single case brought against him by the state.

            As politicians now have pretty much zero actual policies their only vector is attack their opponent yet very rarely do we see any of this fact checked. Some of the campaign videos are near enough made up where they've very selectively edited video and attributed comments to completely unrelated events.

            1. Steve Button Silver badge

              Re: the next one

              OK fair enough, I didn't know that.

              I guess the problem is who exactly gets to decide what's truth and what's misinformation? When Alex Jones said Sandy Hook never happened, etc. that was clearly deliberate misinfornation. When someone like myself (and many many others) says "These lockdowns, are they actually worth all the collateral damage they are going to cause?" that's not misinformation, that's genuine curiosity with a heavy dose of believing that those who are supposed to know better are actually running around like headless chickens trying to work out what will look better on opinion polls and focus groups, rather than what will actually do the most to help.

              And that's not a left/right political thing because although the Conservatives were calling for lockdowns, Labour were asking why they weren't harder and faster.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: the next one

                His claim had been that it was potentially a false flag or otherwise staged event to push the gun control narrative. Pretty much the same claims that have been circulated about the Trump near miss shooting. Many on the political left are claiming it was staged, faked, crisis actors etc.

                https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2024/jul/14/social-media/donald-trump-staged-the-shooting-at-his-rally-in-b/

  4. anderlan

    "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

    "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

    -- Sincerely, an oligarch who's worried by prospect of progressive administration, and who'd much rather perversely ally with the bumbling autocrat in the race, and who's also a social media mogul who's bottom line depends on controversy (whether true or false--but false controversies are more numerous and exciting to the misinformed, thusly more profitable).

    1. Charlie Clark Silver badge

      Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

      I take as much issue with the statement "progressive administration" as I do with half the crap the Trump spouts; it really is difficult to consider any US legislation from the last four years as progressive, in the general meaning of the term: tariffs and corporate handouts, certainly aren't. US elections are often dominated by false dichotomies which whip up fervour that ultimately benefits the real legislators: the lobbyists.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

        Chris Cuomo put it pretty well in a report from the DNC last week when he pointed out that the talk on stage was just performative as the people paying $500k+ for a VIP booth in the arena are not going to support a candidate that might cost them money. Even Jon Stuart pointed out that they had Bernie taking about making billionaires pay their fair share followed by an actual billionaire.

        1. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

          Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

          I think the usefulness of "performative", if it ever had any, has already expired. It just means "something I disagree with".

        2. StudeJeff

          Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

          Bernie Sanders, the millionaire politician who's never had a real job in his life, used to complain about millionaires not paying their "fair share" until he became one.

          1. Lars

            Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

            @StudeJeff

            That was stupid.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

            wait until you hear about the orange billionaire begging for money to pay his lawyers, your mind will be blown to bits

    2. Dan 55 Silver badge

      Re: "I'm not trying to play politics or foment controversy"

      Tech bro's gonna tech bro. Lately it'd be news if they didn't weigh into elections.

  5. codejunky Silver badge

    Erm

    "Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is giving ammunition to conspiracy theorists"

    Because the so called conspiracy theorists were right? As with the Twitter files revelations?

    The truth is now ammunition to conspiracy theorists. Surely its no longer conspiracy theory when shown correct? To dispel a conspiracy requires the facts, which give the clearer picture of right and wrong.

    1. Vincent van Gopher
      Facepalm

      Re: Erm

      lol

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Erm

      The lefties on here don't like the truth !

      1. cmdrklarg

        Re: Erm

        No, we don't like repeatedly paraded around bullshit masquerading as "truth", whatever that means. Bring facts and evidence, or get lost.

    3. oreosRnice

      Re:

      This article is very politically motivated. The comments and the voting is the stereotypical response to political articles. If not left leaning you’ll get down voted. Regardless if as a person you’re moderate, right winged or believed to be neutral.

      This isn’t Reddit, but it’s becoming a similar cesspool. I want tech related news, not politically drives left or right.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Re:

        GFY disinformation peddler

      2. Charlie Clark Silver badge
        FAIL

        Re: Re:

        This isn’t Reddit, but it’s becoming a similar cesspool.

        Says someone who joined last year…

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Black Helicopters

      Re: Erm

      Because the so called conspiracy theorists were right?

      Chemtrails and Jewish space lasers, huh?

      5G activated death vaccines?

      Nutters.

  6. amajadedcynicaloldfart
    WTF?

    Oh peryooooook

    "Zuckerberg said he's keen to not be seen as appearing to play a role in influencing elections"

    How much did drumph pay you to say that?

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    The "pressure" in question is purposefully not explained, meaning it was probably not what they want to imply it was. You'll note the letter does not say "coercion" or that any threat was made if the posts were not taken down.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      "Pressure" as in the correct placement of thumbs during their regular mutual back-rubbing sessions.

  8. alain williams Silver badge

    If Zuck does not like censorship ...

    Why does Meta silence voices in support of Palestine on Instagram and Facebook ? This has been going on for years and is still happening.

    1. BasicReality

      Re: If Zuck does not like censorship ...

      Because they won't allow stuff that's illegal such as support for terrorist groups?

      1. alain williams Silver badge

        Re: If Zuck does not like censorship ...

        Supporting Palestine is not the same as supporting Hamas - in spite of what some would like you to think.

  9. BasicReality

    Right again

    All the leftists who denied the censorship, proven to be wrong again. When will they learn.

    1. Nudge Away More

      Re: Right again

      The are in denial (sadly for the rest of us)

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Right again

      probably about the same time you realise your spreading bollocks i.e never as your fucking demented

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Right again

        you're

    3. Casca Silver badge

      Re: Right again

      Oh good. A right wing moron...

  10. cd

    His only concern was lost profits.

    1. fg_swe Silver badge

      The Americans realize Telegram has been eating their business.

      Noone needs U.S. Marxists censoring willy nilly. People moved off US platforms en masse.

  11. oreosRnice

    Tech news without political bias is cool.

    Tech news with clear bias is not cool

  12. mark l 2 Silver badge

    "We've changed our policies and processes to make sure this doesn't happen again – for instance, we no longer temporarily demote things in the US while waiting for fact checkers."

    Why wait for the facts when there are ads to sell to the Facebook idiots around any old BS story

  13. Alan Mackenzie

    A Serious Question for the Editors

    Did The Register at any time during the pandemic come under any pressure from authorities to restrict the content of users' posts? If so, details would be welcome.

    1. chivo243 Silver badge

      Re: A Serious Question for the Editors

      And another serious question. Why no story on the Reg about the release of the financial backers names involved in the purchase of X (twitter)? The mainstream articles lack The Reg in-depth reporting.

    2. fg_swe Silver badge

      Re: A Serious Question for the Editors

      Some of my Covid related posts were removed in the past. Got better, though.

      1. fg_swe Silver badge

        Re: A Serious Question for the Editors

        Now all substantial Covid posts deleted. All hail to oligarchy, I guess.

  14. Howard Sway Silver badge

    "The contributions were designed to be non-partisan," Zuckerberg said

    List of Facebook political donations here for last US election cycle:

    https://www.opensecrets.org/political-action-committees-pacs/facebook-inc/C00502906/candidate-recipients/2020

    Looks like they were non-partisan, if by that phrase you mean "donated to so many politicians of both parties, that the chance of any regulation of Facebook passing through Congress is zero".

  15. Henry Wertz 1 Gold badge

    Yes

    Yes I'm sure the Biden administration did lean on Zuckerberg etc. to remove dangerous misinformation.

    I'm torn -- on the one hand the 1st ammendment fully applies, and if it came to it I think the Biden administration couldn't have required them to do anything.

    On the other hand, so many people thinlk if they read something more than once on Facebook that means it's factual. The anti vax and anti mask nonsesne definitely lead to a lot of deaths.

    It'd be great if there was some easy way for people to tell when something is backed up by facts and science; when something is unsubstantiated (no strong basis to say it's true but not necessarily false); and when something is a big load of nonsense someone made up and just gets repeated echo chamber style.

    1. codejunky Silver badge

      Re: Yes

      @Henry Wertz 1

      "Yes I'm sure the Biden administration did lean on Zuckerberg etc. to remove dangerous misinformation."

      Step aside from Covid for a second and look at the laptop. That was very dangerous. A mentally impaired runner for president has this terrible scandal showing evidence of illegal behaviour of his son and potentially linking some of that behaviour to the big guy. Instead of stopping misinformation the state actively peddled misinformation.

      Back to Covid, it is about as sure as can be that the virus came from the lab without the Chinese openly admitting it (so its pretty much certainty). I guess this could maybe be dangerous. The US President telling the truth and being clear that the virus came from the lab in China when the WHO were more interesting in not sounding racist than chasing down the virus. Maybe the danger was that the US was funding the lab that was playing with the viruses.

      Elsewhere on here people are debating the specifics of masks, vaccine and so on. I am surprised not to have seen people mention the social distancing rules being so important, unless you were protesting/rioting

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Yes

        " WHO were more interesting in not sounding racist than chasing down the virus"

        More accurately the WHO are/were pretty much controlled by China. If you set the wayback machine to early 2020 and the WHO comes out with a treatment protocol that involves early intervention with ventilators and the west blindly follows it but the reality is its damaging lungs and pretty much killing people. It was all very strange as normally doctors are given a pretty free hand when it comes to treating illnesses, especially something new, yet in this case doctors HAD to follow the WHO instructions...

        We also had the US Dems doing their level best to undermine Trump in early 2020 with the likes of Nancy Pelosi encouraging people to visit chinatown, Mardi Gras still going ahead and the head of public health in NY saying that covid poses little danger so keep using the subway and go to parades.

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuXruIr6QSM

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Yes

        "The US President telling the truth and being clear that the virus came from the lab in China ..."

        Nice gaslighting. Il Douche, through his sidekick Bannon, was peddling the false conspiracy theory it was a Chinese Bio-weapon. Don't go changing the narrative now, MAGAnon.

        1. codejunky Silver badge
          FAIL

          Re: Yes

          @AC

          "was peddling the false conspiracy theory it was a Chinese Bio-weapon"

          What false conspiracy theory? The lab was performing gain of function experiments and modifications to Coronavirus. And so-

          https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/bioweapon

          "Don't go changing the narrative now, MAGAnon."

          You do realise that you are the coward? And even if you untick that box I am still not posting anon. So you are wrong on 2 counts in one short comment, congrats.

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Yes

            "... I am still not posting anon"

            Of course you are. Unless you are, "Ms. A. Codejunky" which I seriously doubt.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: Yes

            What false conspiracy theory? The lab was performing gain of function experiments and modifications to Coronavirus.

            Could you post the links to the evidence that this is the case for Covid 19? Would be interesting to finally see the proof. Thanks.

            1. codejunky Silver badge

              Re: Yes

              @AC

              I am not sure which part you take issue with?-

              From the left leaning vanityfair-

              https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2021/10/nih-admits-funding-risky-virus-research-in-wuhan

              I am not sure which part you take issue with-

              > The US funded the lab in wuhan

              > The lab was messing with coronavirus and making it more infectious

              > The virus most likely came from the lab

              I am guessing you want the Chinese to say it absolutely came from the lab and a DeLorean to stop the coverup from happening in the first place.

              1. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: Yes

                Circumstantial evidence about funding of research and a vague comment that it "may" have come from that Lab.

                Proof please.

                1. codejunky Silver badge
                  Big Brother

                  Re: Yes

                  @AC

                  "Proof please."

                  Interesting. So the funding the lab is fact. The lab messing with corona viruses is fact. The coverup isnt even disputed.

                  The facts seem to be that the covid pandemic started where there were labs doing the very research to make covid style viruses and once the pandemic started the Chinese and NIH acted quickly to cover up and silence information about covid and the lab. Causing serious back tracking and obfuscation under questioning from those in the know.

                  So where did it come from?

                  1. Anonymous Coward
                    Anonymous Coward

                    Re: Yes

                    Bill Gates bio-engineered it. To bring about the Great Reset. And makes a killing from vaccine patents. There's plenty of evidence. Watch "Plandemic". Read "The Light".

                    WAKE UP SHEEPLE!

                    1. Anonymous Coward
                      Anonymous Coward

                      Re: Yes

                      There is no question he made a LOT of money!

              2. Anonymous Coward
                Anonymous Coward

                Re: Yes

                >>>and a DeLorean to stop the coverup from happening in the first place.

                How will a trunk filled with cocaine help in this instance?

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: Yes

                  >>> How will a trunk filled with cocaine help in this instance?

                  Honestly, is there any situation that WOULDN’T help?

      3. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Yes

        nice load of the junky far right wing nutter bullshit generator.

        plenty of shit for the roses again

  16. Winkypop Silver badge
    Devil

    “Meta shouldn't compromise its content standards”

    Meta has standards?

    This, I didn’t know!

  17. Will Godfrey Silver badge
    Stop

    The poor vulture is getting close to death

    Is there any way us techies and nerds can get El Reg back from the {anti}Social media clowns who have invaded it.

    1. Steve Button Silver badge

      Re: The poor vulture is getting close to death

      Is there any way we can get back the site that at least pretended to "Bite the Hand". Currently it's mostly being stroked by the hand as it sits on the lap of the democratic party.

      I'm pretty sure there's no coming back from that. Rather than get it back, I'd like to know somewhere I can get tech news that's politically neutral and is not afraid to "Bite the hand". Does such a site exist?

      I want a site that's equally scathing towards Dems/Rupublicans and Conservative/Labour. Because usually they deserve it. Not sure advertisers would like it though. Does anyone want to set one up?

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: The poor vulture is getting close to death

        "I want a site that's equally scathing towards Dems/Rupublicans and Conservative/Labour."

        Try Private Eye.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: The poor vulture is getting close to death

        plenty of right wing shit bag sites for you to fuck off too. please let the door hit you on the way out! it might knock some sense into you

  18. Bebu Silver badge
    Windows

    How interesting...

    I would have thought covid and vaccination would be rather passé by now.

    Personally I am quite in favour of free Ivermectin and intravenous bleach for all those stupid enough to want to use them.

    Looking at the photograph of Z heading this article it seems he might be morphing into a Harry Potteresque house elf like Dobby.

    Perhaps someone should give him a sock*. ;)

    * British idiom will easily suggest what he ought to do with it.

    1. Steve Button Silver badge

      Re: How interesting...

      They are still dishing it out to 6 month old babies and up in the USA, so hardly passé. And this is now a mostly US site. I'm not sure how many are taking up the offer? but it does seem like a huge disparity compared to the UK where we only offer it to people aged 65+. It's an interesting natural experiment though, right?

  19. Marty McFly Silver badge
    FAIL

    The real problem....

    People believing everything that is posted on social media.

    Frankly that is the lesson we should all take away from this debacle. Facebook, and similar services, are simply not a reliable source of truth for any topic. They are advertising platforms that manipulate content to maximize user screen time. Nothing boosts screen time better than controversial information, regardless of whether it is true or not.

    Remember that lesson as the clown circus election cycle gets in to high gear.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: The real problem....

      Neither is most of the main stream media any more. It is all opinion and very little news.

      1. fg_swe Silver badge

        Worse

        It's coordinated, multi channel Lying Operations. Covid exposed this.

    2. fg_swe Silver badge

      Yeah

      And the mainstream media lies in 66 of 100 cases in favor of oligarchy and corporations.

      So much better !

  20. Kimo

    Was there pressure?

    What I have not read anywhere was of any type of threat against Meta if they did not comply. Informing, advocating, and pressuring are very different things. Was Meta threatened in many way, directly or indirectly? Or were the Federal agencies doing their duty to advocate for voluntary action that could and did save lives, as is their mission? Does Zuck want to turn Meta into X, where misinformation is not just tolerated by encouraged??

    1. Steve Button Silver badge

      Re: Was there pressure?

      Zuck and co were told by the FBI to watch out for Russian disinformation just before the Hunter Biden laptop story broke, and as a direct result of that warning they decided to temporarily suppress the story. If that hadn't happened we could be living in an alternative time line.

      They only get to play that trick once, and Facebook won't trust the three letter agencies any more going forward. They will push back and ask for credible evidence, instead of a "friendly hint". Zuck has said as much, and I don't blame him. Fool me once, shame on you.

      When all the social media sites got direct messages saying "How come Alex Berenson is still on your platform?" that's pretty clear coercion isn't it? I guess we'll see when it goes to the Supreme Court. He didn't say anything illegal, or even wrong. Just inconvenient.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Was there pressure?

        go back to your far right nutter sites with that bullshit

  21. Lars
    Pint

    Lots about Covid

    Given the fact that both Britain and the USA did so very poorly regarding Covid I think we can claim that part of that must be due to idiots in charge in both countries, Boris and Trump.

    Or should we look more at the people or say a two party system with a one party government.

    I don't think I lost anything washing my hands, reluctantly using a mask and keeping some distance to people if possible. And having my vaccines of course.

    And as for restaurants I did not use my mask when sitting as I was drinking and perhaps eating but standing up I put it on as I was probably leaving. Not much of a problem.

    1. codejunky Silver badge

      Re: Lots about Covid

      @Lars

      "Given the fact that both Britain and the USA did so very poorly regarding Covid I think we can claim that part of that must be due to idiots in charge in both countries, Boris and Trump."

      I dont think that quite works for the US. The states performed differently and implemented different policies. I do agree about the UK reaction to covid. However when it comes to procuring vaccine Trump and the UK gov did an absolutely stunning job.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Lots about Covid

        "However when it comes to procuring vaccine Trump and the UK gov did an absolutely stunning job."

        Does that straw-grasping really counter balance the initial poor pandemic response and death toll, hmm? Or just mealy-mouthed partisan apologist speak.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Lots about Covid

          The initial poor response in the US was entirely down to resistance from the democrats and the desire to harm Trump's reelection.

          In the US it is deliberately hard for the president to rule over the individual states. If its not written in federal law then it falls to the states.

          What we saw in early 2020 was the likes of Nancy Pelosi telling people a travel ban on China was racist and the head of the NY public health department saying that there is little to fear and don't avoid the subway or other crowded places.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuXruIr6QSM

          In NY and other states there were orders to move elderly covid patients to nursing homes. This was not an order from Trump.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_COVID-19_nursing_home_scandal

          https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/2619005/five-governors-besides-cuomo-who-sent-covid-19-positive-patients-into-nursing-homes/

          And coupled with a very unhealthy population, even more so than the UK.

        2. codejunky Silver badge

          Re: Lots about Covid

          @AC

          "Does that straw-grasping really counter balance the initial poor pandemic response and death toll, hmm? Or just mealy-mouthed partisan apologist speak."

          You might need to read my comment before replying.

  22. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    The pressure from Govt was:

    Please remove all disinformation that is preventing us from avoiding the spread of this disease, or we will have to investigate all the shady deals that you made with the Chinese...

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