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George Soros wants Zuckerberg removed from Facebook

Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:03 pm
Posted by tiggerthetooth
Big Momma's House
Member since Oct 2010
61283 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:03 pm
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Because Zuckerberg won't ban political ads. This is just an attempt by the left to control more information.

quote:

On Monday, billionaire leftist George Soros, seemingly panicked that President Trump might be reelected, attacked Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, demanding that they be removed from their posts because Zuckerberg will not capitulate to leftists’ calls for censoring or banning political ads.


quote:

Writing in Financial Times, Soros accused Zuckerberg of having a “mutual assistance arrangement” with Trump that will “help him get re-elected.” His open letter, in which he referred to an article in Financial Times on Sunday penned by Zuckerberg, stated:



quote:

Mark Zuckerberg should stop obfuscating the facts by piously arguing for government regulation (“We need more regulation of Big Tech”, February 17). Mr. Zuckerberg appears to be engaged in some kind of mutual assistance arrangement with Donald Trump that will help him to get re-elected.

Facebook does not need to wait for government regulations to stop accepting any political advertising in 2020 until after the elections on November 4. If there is any doubt whether an ad is political, it should err on the side of caution and refuse to publish. It is unlikely that Facebook will follow this course. Therefore, I repeat my proposal, Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg should be removed from control of Facebook. (It goes without saying that I support government regulation of social media platforms.)





quote:

Zuckerberg had written that he wanted to wait for regulation because he wanted a fair set of rules for everyone across the board, opining:


quote:

We believe advertising is more transparent on Facebook than television, print or other online services. We publish details about political and issue ads — including who paid for them, how much was spent, and how many people were reached — in our ads library. But who decides what counts as political advertising in a democracy? If a non-profit runs an ad about immigration during an election, is it political? Who should decide — private companies, or governments?

Another theme is openness. I’m glad the EU is looking at making data sharing easier, because it enables people to build things that are valuable for society. International agencies use Facebook’s Data for Good program to figure out which communities need help after natural disasters, and governments use our publicly available population density maps for vaccination campaigns. Of course, you should always be able to transfer your data between services.

But how do we define what counts as your data? If I share something with you, like my birthday, should you be able to take that data to other services, like your calendar app? Is that my data or yours? We have to balance promoting innovation and research against protecting people’s privacy and security. Without clear rules on portability, strict privacy laws encourage companies to lock down data, refusing to share with others, to minimize regulatory risks …

I believe good regulation may hurt Facebook’s business in the near term but it will be better for everyone, including us, over the long term. These are problems that need to be fixed and that affect our industry as a whole. If we don’t create standards that people feel are legitimate, they won’t trust institutions or technology. Of course, we won’t agree with every proposal. Regulation can have unintended consequences, especially for small businesses that can’t do sophisticated data analysis and marketing on their own. Millions of small businesses rely on companies like ours to do this for them. If regulation makes it harder for them to share data and use these tools, that could disproportionately hurt them and inadvertently advantage larger companies that can.
Still, rather than relying on individual companies to set their own standards, we’d benefit from a more democratic process. This is why we’re pushing for new legislation, and it’s why we support existing US proposals to prevent election interference like the Honest Ads Act and the Deter Act.



This post was edited on 2/18/20 at 7:06 pm
Posted by gthog61
Irving, TX
Member since Nov 2009
71001 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:04 pm to
Who the frick does he think he is?
Posted by Texas Yarddog
Member since Apr 2018
2614 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:05 pm to
Eating their own.

Love it
Posted by DavidTheGnome
Monroe
Member since Apr 2015
29170 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:05 pm to
quote:

Who the frick does he think he is?



George Soros
Posted by SeeeeK
some where
Member since Sep 2012
28069 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:06 pm to
It's amazing that Soros won't die of natural causes, but in an hour or so, some child will be killed by errant gun fire.

Karma can be hard to believe in.
Posted by Big Scrub TX
Member since Dec 2013
33446 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:07 pm to
quote:

Who the frick does he think he is?
I mean, he's likely a fairly large shareholder for starters.
Posted by teke184
Zachary, LA
Member since Jan 2007
95754 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:09 pm to



Tall words from Soros considering FB was an integral part of the Dem turnout machine IIRC.
Posted by tiggerthetooth
Big Momma's House
Member since Oct 2010
61283 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:13 pm to
quote:

Tall words from Soros considering FB was an integral part of the Dem turnout machine IIRC.




Its deeply idiotic of Soros to actually believe Facebook is going to have that much influence over the election and not the general behavior of the Democrats and men like him who work from the shadows to sow discord across the world.

A man who is very likely at the center of the Ukraine corruption scandal.
Posted by blueboy
Member since Apr 2006
56371 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:17 pm to
Suspicious. Soros is all about crating media narratives. He knows he[s reviled by most people. Why would he put his name out there as being opposed to Zuck unless he wanted us to be sympathetic to him?
Posted by C
Houston
Member since Dec 2007
27824 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:17 pm to
This is just a round about hit trying to protect traditional media of print and tv news. They can’t stand twitter, facebook and the internet as a whole. It’s destroying the traditional outlets advertising dollars which gives them power.
Posted by teke184
Zachary, LA
Member since Jan 2007
95754 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:18 pm to
Desperation?

Think “We’ll be in nooses if he wins!”
Posted by rsbd
banks of the Mississippi
Member since Jan 2007
22171 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:19 pm to
Will Soros just die already
Posted by TheeRealCarolina
Member since Aug 2018
17925 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:22 pm to
I still say anyone who’s voted is swayed much less determined/decided by a political ad shouldn’t vote.

All these “rock the vote” and “get out and vote” campaigns are a problem not a solution. We need less people voting, not more. Dumb people who pay no federal taxes should not be voting in federal elections. Same thing at the state level. And every public office election in every state should require a photo ID for voting.

Posted by tiggerthetooth
Big Momma's House
Member since Oct 2010
61283 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:22 pm to
quote:

Suspicious. Soros is all about crating media narratives. He knows he[s reviled by most people. Why would he put his name out there as being opposed to Zuck unless he wanted us to be sympathetic to him?


I'm not sure hes all there anymore. Hes like 90 years old. He somewhat endorsed Elizabeth Warren.

Either way, Soros has already tried the top down (win from the top to enact change down to the bottom) method. Now hes pouring money into more local races to go the bottom up route. His view of the way things should be is fundamentally flawed. He thinks, along with many liberals, that the world is just a few nice conversations and racial bias classes away from coming together and singing kumbaya around a campfire.

Just like that, men like Soros believe they can wipe away thousands of years of cultures and come together.

Hes just as much a utopian as the any dem. I think he has a point when it comes to pure financial stability, but overall I think he comes across as a man that's been sitting in the castle too long.
Posted by BuckyCheese
Member since Jan 2015
49441 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:25 pm to
Surprised some nation state hasn't taken him out yet.

Posted by tiggerthetooth
Big Momma's House
Member since Oct 2010
61283 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:26 pm to
quote:

I still say anyone who’s voted is swayed much less determined/decided by a political ad shouldn’t vote.

All these “rock the vote” and “get out and vote” campaigns are a problem not a solution. We need less people voting, not more. Dumb people who pay no federal taxes should not be voting in federal elections. Same thing at the state level. And every public office election in every state should require a photo ID for voting.




Democrats are the only ones that want to lower the standards for voting.

They want no IDs, auto registration, and to lower the voting age.

I think men like Soros wrongly believe social media will dictate the coming generations and I'm not so sure that's true. I think social media is mellowing out and people are seeing it for what is, a bunch of fake/vain shite posted by a teeny tiny minority.

He probably thinks if he controls social media, he can control the young voters to vote according to his whims.
Posted by tiggerthetooth
Big Momma's House
Member since Oct 2010
61283 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:28 pm to
quote:

Surprised some nation state hasn't taken him out yet.



Funny you say that, because he seems to be a man who hates war and hated GW Bush for his war attitudes. Which is why he considered stopping him a matter of "life or death".

But then again the great military of the US is why men like him even had a place to thrive free of violent ideologies.

Men like him fail to understand how any system where a few dictate without accountability what happens to the many will always fail. Even if those few are hidden in the shadows using their bags of money to do it.

Posted by dchunk
NOLA
Member since Dec 2010
959 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:30 pm to
Should unfriend him
Posted by SelaTiger
Member since Aug 2016
18036 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:31 pm to
frickin’ Trump. Denying poor George Soros the opportunity to see his world vision happen. Soros almost had it, so close.
Posted by Zap Rowsdower
MissLou, La
Member since Sep 2010
13267 posts
Posted on 2/18/20 at 7:33 pm to
quote:

I mean, he's likely a fairly large shareholder for starters.


What he owns of FB doesn’t even qualify as a drop in the bucket compared to what Zuck and co have. Soros telling Facebook what he wants them to do is the equivalent of the local businessman who owns a few shares of stock in the hometown bank telling the board of directors that they’re going to approve his operating loan.
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