Gizmodo threw Facebook under the bus, reporting that the team that runs the “Trending” topics section routinely removes certain right-wing political sites from the section, even when data
showed they were trending. It doesn't take much to piss off right-wingers, so a bunch of them in the Senate banged out a letter to Facebook saying WTF?
No, this was not a letter to a news
organization (which the government has historically tried to regulate into being “unbiased," or at least limiting its regional influence); it was to a social media platform that, let's face it,
has more influence over Americans than any media company in history.
Depending on whether major news organizations
run stories they do or don’t like, many argue that these media companies — especially newspapers owned by families or billionaires — are biased toward the left or the right,
reflecting the views of the owners.
Thanks to cable TV, we have "news" organizations that are biased by design. And the shift of readers to digital has more "news" organizations compromising
their "editorial integrity" every day with native advertising. Argue all you want about how consumers like how native "flows" within regular editorial — it is selling out by any other
name.
Throughout the 20th century, when most families read newspapers for their news, there were arguments back and forth about how if the news wasn't slanted one way or another, just the
choice of stories gave the press enormous power to "set the agenda" of what was important — and how local, national and international news should be considered.
Behind all of it, just as
at Facebook, were and are human beings (algorithms are programmed by humans, and so contain all kinds of biases as well). Watch the same story on three or four of the major network evening news
programs and you will see a profound difference in everything from voice inflection to choice of words to facial expressions that transmit the personal feelings of the reporter in spite of efforts by
the parent organization to be "fair and balanced." If you read the same story in different newspapers (or news sites) from around the world, you will often wonder if they are talking about the same
event.
All of this is to put to rest the idea that news, whether delivered by the "press" or social media, is in any way unbiased. And as we have seen to date, no amount of government
pressure or direct intervention will resolve this. It is not an organizational issue (although it may have been at Facebook), it is a human issue. If the feds tolerate Fox news, they have no moral
high ground on which to stand and complain about the choices Facebook is making.
Unless, of course, they decide in the long run that Facebook has become too powerful, too influential (much
like newspapers and the Big Three Networks in the last century) and they decide to “regulate” it — which, by Facebook's consumer-generated-content DNA, will be totally
impossible.
Finally, it is a singularly sad commentary on our society as a whole that Facebook has become a primary source of news, thanks very much to news organization co-opting themselves
by begging for their traffic. If Facebook leans left or right should not even be a thing. Especially with a world of relatively credible news just a click or two away.