Today I was reading an article on another site and it came to light that Facebook have a policy of allowing politicians to lie or mislead, worse this policy does not apply to the rest of us, thats a seriously concerning policy
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-50249719In September, Facebook clarified its fact-checking policy and said it would treat all posts by politicians as "newsworthy content" that should "be seen and heard".
Critics said the move would give politicians complete freedom to create deliberately misleading advertisements that could be promoted to millions of people on the social network.
In October, Facebook's chief executive Mark Zuckerberg was questioned by US congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez about the policy.
She asked whether she would be allowed to run ads on Facebook falsely claiming that Republican candidates had backed the "Green New Deal" environmental policy. "I think probably," said Mr Zuckerberg.
This policy revelation is in sharp contrast to the morals of a rival platform doing something honourable by stopping all paid political advertising on its platform, a real breath of fresh air , well done Twitter
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-50243306Twitter is to ban all political advertising worldwide, saying that the reach of such messages "should be earned, not bought".
"While internet advertising is incredibly powerful and very effective for commercial advertisers, that power brings significant risks to politics," company CEO Jack Dorsey tweeted.
It seems Facebook are too busy chasing the quick dollar to bother with mere trifles such as allowing folks to get honest and reliable facts to base sound judgements on, and with the span of its userbase allowing this abuse of power by the already powerful simply to earn a chunk of the enormous advertising budgets fielded by corrupt regimes folks are left with a distinctly nasty taste, that taste is the legacy of mr zuckerberg.
It seems even some of the content moderators have had enough.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-50247540Cognizant, a professional services firm, is to stop moderating "objectionable" content on behalf of Facebook and other clients.
It follows an investigation by The Verge into working conditions and the mental health of employees working at an Arizona moderation centre on behalf of the social network.
My sympathies go out to those folks who have to suffer reading through day after day of vitriolic nastyness from the many deranged types whom troll Facebook.
Theres no honour when easy revenue streams are at stake so why not choose a truthful platform name that reflects this corrupt policy ?