Facebook make only about £34 a year from the average customer in the
UK – a little under £3 a month (and that’s before costs), so clearly
there is no head-room or motivation, for a human level of customer
service or attention. The user is not the customer; rather, they are the
product whose data is sold to advertisers.
Thus, users do not
have a direct customer relationship with the platform. The network is
not directly incentivised to “care” about the user before the
advertiser. And no matter where you lie on the spectrum between “free
speech absolutism” and “private entities have the right to censor any
user”, with such low margins it is inevitable machine processing will
have to be used to moderate posts and deal with the customer interface.
But
it is a fact the customer processing and management capabilities Social
Networks are now evolving is being utilised in a variety of ways beyond
just moderation. And it is also true this automated processing is being
done at scale and is now applied to every post every member makes. 68%
of US voters are on Facebook. In the UK it’s 66% and France 73.2%. The
figures are similar for every democratic nation in the West. So it is
vitally important the applied rules should be politically neutral.
The
power that exists within the ability to machine-process every users
posts is far deeper and more profound than perhaps many realise. And
while it can’t directly dictate what users write in their messages it
has the capacity to fundamentally shape which messages gain traction.
Social
Media services have become de-facto town squares and most would agree
their corporate owners should avoid ever putting a hand on the scales
and influencing politics.
Additionally as everyone who uses
Facebook is aware, especially when it comes to politically sensitive
topics, the system will qualify an individual’s reach; sometimes to an
extreme degree. Or that user will simply be banned for a period of time,
or banned from the network entirely.
So we can ask the
question, since the social media corporations have so much censorship
power, how do we know they aren’t engaging in unethical political
interference? Can they be trusted with the responsibility?
I will return to this question, but it’s clear that trust in these corporations is deeply misplaced.
The
pandemic woke many people up to the levels of control those in charge
of our Social Media networks are imposing. They, write the rules to
boost engagement for posts they favour, making certain individuals’
follower counts more valuable. Conversely, users who go against the
grain (or against the establishment narrative) see their engagement
subtly reduced or even tank, or they can be banned from the service
entirely. And the evidence is that, somewhat contrary to the principles
of democracy, hands have been very firmly placed on the scales at
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