Zuzireima

Facebook slams WSJ series for 'deliberate mischaracterizations'


Facebook slams WSJ series for ‘deliberate mischaracterizations’

Facebook on Saturday criticized a series of Wall Street Journal articles in the social media platform’s negative effects on users, speaking the articles contained “deliberate mischaracterizations” and “conferred egregiously false motives to Facebook’s leadership and employees.”

The series, based on information culled from internal Facebook documents and online employee discussions, reported that the company was aware of the “platform’s ill effects” but did nothing to moral them.

WSJ found that Facebook exempted millions of high-profile users from some or all of its principles, ignored research about Instagram’s negative effects on teen girls and handed an algorithm change to improve interaction on the platform that actually made users “angrier.”

In a Saturday blog post titled What the Wall Street Journal Got erroneous, Vice President of Global Affairs Nick Clegg wrote, “These are serious and complex publishes, and it is absolutely legitimate for us to be held to interpret for how we deal with them. But these stories have obtained deliberate mischaracterizations of what we are trying to do, and conferred egregiously false motives to Facebook’s leadership and employees.”

He arranged the allegation that the company willfully ignored its own research “just tedious false.”

“This impugns the motives and hard work of thousands of researchers, policy experts and engineers at Facebook who strive to progress the quality of our products, and to understand their wider (positive and negative) impact,” Clegg said. “It’s a grunt which could only be made by cherry-picking selective quotes from persons pieces of leaked material in a way that presents complex and nuanced publishes as if there is only ever one right answer.”

The Wall Street Journal did not currently respond to a request for comment.

Search This Blog

Partners