Tag: facebook

  • China can teach the West an important lesson about innovation

    From the early nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, Western countries attributed their economic growth to the discoveries of “scientists and navigators.” A country needed only the “zeal” to develop “obvious” commercial applications, and build the facilities to meet demand for new products.

    Until recently, the Chinese believed the same thing. But now, Chinese business people and entrepreneurs are increasingly showing not only the entrepreneurial drive to adapt to new opportunities, but also the desire and capacity to innovate for themselves, rather than simply copying what’s already out there.

    Indeed, more and more Chinese companies are realizing that they must innovate in order to get – and stay – ahead in the global economy. Several companies – notably Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent – made breakthroughs, by offering digital-age infrastructure that facilitates innovative activity. And industrial firms have recently moved into robots and artificial intelligence.

    Tencent's rise
    Tencent’s rise

    For its part, China’s government is evidently supportive of Chinese businesses developing a capacity to produce indigenous innovations. It no doubt recognizes that such innovations are all the more valuable when innovation remains weak in the West, where growth in total factor productivity ( TFP ) has continued its long slowdown.

    In recent years, China’s government has introduced initiatives aimed at increasing both entrepreneurship and innovation. It has shortened dramatically the process for forming a new company. It has built a vast number of schools, where Chinese children learn more about the world they will face.

    And it recently facilitated the entry of foreign experts to work on new projects in the business sector.

    The authorities have also recognized the importance of allowing more competition in the economy. Individuals should be freed up to start new companies, and existing companies should be freed up to enter new industries. Competition solves a lot of problems – a point that is increasingly lost on the West.

    At the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in January, Chinese officials discussed basic reforms that the government introduced two years ago to increase competition. Under the new policy, excess capacity now signals that supply should be allowed to contract and prompt redundant firms to exit the market. Of course, excess demand signals that supply should be allowed to increase, leading to the entry of new firms.

    The key insight is that when existing enterprises are protected from new market entrants bearing new ideas, the result will be less innovation and less “adaptation” to a changing world, to use Friedrich Hayek’sterm.

    Another argument can be made. In any modern economy, virtually every industry operates in the face of a largely unknowable future. The more companies an industry has thinking about a problem, the more likely a solution is to be found. A company that has been kept out of an industry might know something that all the companies in the industry do not. Or some unique experience may have furnished an individual with “personal knowledge” that is impossible to transmit to others who have not had the same experience. Whatever the case, society benefits – through lower prices, more jobs, better products and services, and so forth – when outsiders with something to add are free to do so.

    All of this was known to the great theorists of the 1920s and 1930s: Hayek, Frank Knight, and John Maynard Keynes. And now it is known to the Chinese, who understand that a country benefits when companies – each with its own thinking and knowledge – are free to compete.

    The West seems to have forgotten this. Since the 1930s, most Western governments have seen it as their duty to protect established enterprises from competition, even when it comes from new firms offering new adaptations or innovations. These protections, which come in myriad forms, have almost certainly discouraged many entrepreneurs from coming forward with new and better ideas.

    History is rife with evidence of the value of competition. In post-war Britain, into the 1970s, industries were controlled by exclusive clubs within the Confederation of British Industry, which barred new entrants. By the time Margaret Thatcher became prime minister in 1979, TFP had stagnated. But Thatcher put a stop to the Confederation’s anti-competitive practices, and Britain’s TFP was growing again by the mid-1980s.

    We are now seeing something similar in China. By 2016, China’s TFP growth rate had been slowing for a number of years. But since the reforms that year, it has been increasing.

    The West must address its great TFP slowdown, which has lasted since the late 1960s. Ending protection of incumbents from new entrants possessing ideas for new adaptions and innovations is a good place to start.

    Source: World Economic Forum

  • Twitter to ban cryptocurrency adverts on its platform

    Twitter Inc is to ban most advertising of cryptocurrencies on its platform, joining Facebook and Google in a clampdown on the nascent industry, the company said in a statement.

    The San Francisco-based firm will this week launch a policy that prohibits advertising of initial coin offerings ( ICOs ), a form of crowd funding used to raise cash by creating new coins.

    Also adverts that promote token sales and crypto wallet services, the company said in a statement.

    The policy will also ban adverts from crypto-exchanges, with some limited exceptions.

    Twitter said this month it was taking measures to prevent crypto-related accounts from “engaging with others in a deceptive manner”, but it has faced calls to go further after bans by Facebook and Google.

    Facebook restricted crypto-related adverts in February, while Google announced a ban on March 14 that comes into force in June.

    Reuters/NAN

  • Facebook plans crack down on abuses

    SOCIAL media platform Facebook has said it had taken steps to crack down on abuses to ensure safety of data on its platform.

    Its founder, Mark Zuckerberg, said in a statement that the step was also to ensure that people’s trust was gained.

    “We are announcing some important steps for the future of our platform.

    “These steps involve taking action on potential past abuse and putting stronger protections in place to prevent future abuse.

    “Protecting people’s information is the most important thing we do at Facebook.

    “What happened with Cambridge Analytica was a breach of Facebook’s trust.

    “More importantly, it was a breach of the trust people place in Facebook to protect their data when they share it,” Zuckerberg said

    He said people use Facebook to connect with friends and others, using all kinds of apps.

    Zuckerberg said Facebook’s platform helped make apps social; so one’s calendar could show ones friends’ birthdays, for instance.

    He added that to do this, Facebook allowed people to log into apps and share who their friends were and some information about them.

    “Henceforth, Facebook will require that developers get people’s permission before they access the data needed to run their apps.

    “For instance, a photo-sharing app has to get specific permission from the owner to access one’s photos.

    “Over the years, we have introduced more guardrails, including in 2014, when we began reviewing apps that request certain data before they could launch.

    “We are also introducing more granular controls for people to decide what information to share with apps.

    “These actions will prevent any app like Aleksandr Kogan’s from being able to access so much data today.

    “But even with these changes, abuses of our platform and the misuse of people’s data still occur and we know we need to do more,” the founder of the platform said.

    He explained that Facebook would set a higher standard on how developers build on the platform; what people should expect from them and from the Facebook itself.

    The Facebook founder said that the company had reviewed the platform, investigate all apps that had access to large amounts of information to reduce data access.

    “Facebook will be making the choices of users managing their apps more prominent and easier.

    “In the coming weeks, we will expand Facebook’s bug bounty programme so that people can also report to us if they find misuses of data by app developers,” Zuckerberg said.

     

     

     

     

  • German justice minister calls in Facebook over data ‘scandal’

    German Justice Minister Katarina Barley has asked to speak to Facebook executives to find out whether the social media site’s 30 million users in the country were affected by what she described as “scandal” involving personal data.

    Barley said it must be possible for users of social media sites to specify whether they are happy for their data to be used in certain ways, rather than just giving them the option to tick “yes” or not be able to use the service.

    “We know that companies respect the rules when sanctions are particularly painful,” she said on Thursday.

    “And the data protection basic regulation calls for fines of up to 4 percent of a company’s yearly global turnover.”

     Barley also said data protection had to be regulated at a European level, rather than by national governments.

    The news men reports that Facebook Inc Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg apologised on Wednesday for mistakes his company made in how it handled data belonging to 50 million of its users and promised tougher steps to restrict developers’ access to such information.

     The world’s largest social media network is facing growing government scrutiny in Europe and the U. S. about a whistleblower’s allegations that London-based political consultancy Cambridge Analytica improperly accessed user information to build profiles on American voters that were later used to help elect U.S. President Donald Trump in 2016.

    “This was a major breach of trust. I’m really sorry this happened. We have a basic responsibility to protect people’s data,” Zuckerberg said in an interview with CNN, breaking a public silence since the scandal erupted at the weekend.

    Read Also: Facebook chief apologises for data breaches

    He said the social network planned to conduct an investigation of thousands of apps that have used Facebook’s platform, restrict developer access to data, and give members a tool that lets them to disable access to their Facebook data more easily.

    His plans did not represent a big reduction of advertisers’ ability to use Facebook data, which is the company’s lifeblood.

    Zuckerberg said he was open to additional government regulation and happy to testify before the U.S. Congress if he was the right person.

    “I’m not sure we shouldn’t be regulated,” he told CNN. “I actually think the question is more what is the right regulation rather than yes or no, should it be regulated? … People should know who is buying the ads that they see on Facebook.”

    Zuckerberg said Facebook was committed to stopping interference in the U.S. midterm election in November and elections in India and Brazil.

    Facebook shares pared gains on Wednesday after Zuckerberg’s post, closing up 0.7 per cent.

    The company has lost more than 45 billion dollars of its stock market value over the past three days on investor fears that any failure by big tech firms to protect personal data could deter advertisers and users and invite tougher regulation.

    Zuckerberg told the New York Times in an interview published on Wednesday he had not seen a “meaningful number of people” deleting their accounts over the scandal.

    Facebook representatives, including Deputy Chief Privacy Officer Rob Sherman, met U.S. congressional staff for nearly two hours on Wednesday and planned to continue meetings on Capitol Hill on Thursday.

    Facebook was unable to answer many questions, two aides who attended the briefing said.

    NAN

     

  • Facebook under pressure as U.S., EU call for probes into data practices

    British privacy regulators are seeking a warrant to search the offices of the political consultancy Cambridge Analytica, following reports that the company may have improperly gained access to data on 50 million Facebook users.

    The move came as U.S. and European lawmakers demanded an explanation of how the consulting firm, which worked on President Donald Trump’s election campaign, gained access to the data.

    In the U.S., members of Congress called on Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to testify about Facebook’s actions.

    Facebook said on Monday it had hired forensic auditors from the firm Stroz Friedberg to investigate and determine whether Cambridge Analytica still had the data.

    “Auditors from Stroz Friedberg were on site at Cambridge Analytica’s London office this evening,” the company said in a statement late Monday.

    “At the request of the UK Information Commissioner’s Office, which has announced it is pursuing a warrant to conduct its own on-site investigation, the Stroz Friedberg auditors stood down.”

    Facebook shares closed down nearly 7.0 per cent on Monday, wiping nearly $40 billion off its market value as investors worried that new legislation could damage the company’s advertising business.

    “The lid is being opened on the black box of Facebook data practices, and the picture is not pretty,” said Frank Pasquale, a University of Maryland law professor who has written about Silicon Valley’s use of data.

    Also on Monday, a source said that Facebook head of security, Alex Stamos, plans to leave the company over disagreements about the company’s policies on misinformation.

    He had been a strong advocate for an aggressive approach to alleged Russian activity on the platform aimed at manipulating elections.

    His departure was first reported by the New York Times. Facebook declined immediate comment.

    In a tweet, Stamos did not deny he was leaving but said: “Despite the rumors, I’m still fully engaged with my work at Facebook. It’s true that my role did change.”

    The criticism of Cambridge Analytica presents a new threat to Facebook’s reputation, which is already under attack over Russia’s alleged use of Facebook tools to sway U.S. voters with divisive and false news posts before and after the 2016 election.

    London-based Cambridge Analytica said it strongly denied the media claims, and that it deleted all Facebook data it obtained from a third-party application in 2014 after learning the information did not adhere to data protection rules.

    However, further allegations about the firm’s tactics were reported late Monday by British broadcaster Channel 4 which said it secretly taped interviews with senior Cambridge Analytica executives in which they boasted of their ability to sway elections in countries around the world with digital manipulation and traditional political trickery.

    Cambridge Analytica rejected the allegations, saying in a statement that the Channel 4 report “is edited and scripted to grossly misrepresent the nature of those conversations and how the company conducts its business.”

    Facebook was already facing calls on Saturday for regulation from the U.S. Congress after the reports in the New York Times and London’s Observer over the weekend.

    Republican Senator John Kennedy called on Zuckerberg to testify before Congress, and Democratic Senator Ron Widen sent a letter to Zuckerberg asking about company policies for sharing user data with third parties.

    Facebook usually sends lawyers to testify to Congress, or allows trade organizations to represent it and other technology companies in front of lawmakers.

    Facebook and other social media companies including Twitter Inc and Alphabet Inc’s YouTube have taken voluntary steps to restrict possible foreign interference and combat false news, but they have not been forced by law or regulation to make changes and legislation on the issue has stalled.

    Late on Monday, the Connecticut Attorney General said the office will initiate an inquiry into Facebook data policies.

    The Senate was expected to move forward on Monday with a bill that would chip away at the internet industry’s legal shield, a decades-old law known as Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, with a bill intended to address online sex trafficking.

    The measure has already passed the House and is expected to soon become law.

    Reuters/NAN

  • Zuckerberg sells nearly $500m Facebook stock in February

    Zuckerberg sells nearly $500m Facebook stock in February

    Facebook Inc Chief Executive Officer, Mark Zuckerberg, sold nearly 500 million dollars in the company’s shares in February to fund his philanthropic investment vehicle, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative ( CZI ), regulatory filings showed.

    The move is not a surprise, being part of Zuckerberg’s plan to expedite stock sales to fund the initiative he set up in December 2015 with his wife Priscilla Chan.

    Two security filings on Thursday showed that Zuckerberg sold 685,000 shares worth 125.4 million dollars in the last three days of February.

    This had taken his total sales in the month to about 2.7 million shares worth 482.2 million dollars.

    Zuckerberg said in September he would sell 35 million to 75 million shares of Facebook over the next 18 months.

    That would amount to up to 13 billion dollars, based on Facebook’s current share price.

    The Silicon Valley billionaire has said he will donate 99 per cent of his Facebook shares to CZI – worth about 45 billion dollars when the initiative was formed.

    He sold about 1.6 billion dollars of the company’s stock in 2016 and 2017, according to technology website Recode.

    Zuckerberg’s foundation is similar to those set up by Microsoft Corp founder Bill Gates and his wife Melinda Gates, and the Buffett Foundation, formed by billionaire Warren Buffett.

    Reuters/NAN

  • W.TEC, Facebook enlighten pupils about Safer Internet

    W.TEC, Facebook enlighten pupils about Safer Internet

    For the second time, the Women’s Technology Empowerment Centre (W.TEC), has partnered  Facebook to mark the Safer Internet Day (SID) celebrated yearly on February 6.

    On Wednesday last week, the partners gathered pupils from 10 secondary schools at the New Era Girls’ Senior Secondary School, Surulere, Lagos, to teach them how to be safer online.

    The global theme for this year’s SID, “Create, connect and share respect: A better Internet starts with you”. Facebook’s focus to make the internet safer for the youth and W.TEC’s theme: “Becoming a Civil Citizen of the Internet: For a better internet for all” found convergence at the event.

    The 200 participants, both boys and girls from the 10 schools as well as 15 teachers learnt about Nigerian Internet laws/enforcement and social media community rules and the Reality of Internet Safety in Nigeria in sessions facilitated by representatives from Co-Creation Hub of Nigeria (CcHUB) and Paradigm Initiative of Nigeria (PIN).

    The programme also featured a practical session during which the pupils wrote on sticky notes all what they had learnt and exchanged with one other in order to share knowledge in a fun way.

    The pupils were also shared into groups to produce messages against cyber crime, which they shared with all participants.

    Facebook provided materials and instructional videos on Facebook safety which were made available to participants.

    W.TEC Executive Director, Mrs Oreoluwa Lesi, said the objectives of the programme were to: “strengthen knowledge and skills of youths in driving for more youth to engage and use the internet positively and towards the socio – economic growth of the country; teach our youth the innovative ways of using the Internet safely; and to teach our youth to have a better understanding of the legal aspects to social media and the internet so as for them not to trample on the rights of others.”

  • Facebook claims its app drives SMEs’ revenue

    Digital platforms are increasingly becoming vital to the growth of Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) in Nigeria.

    Facebook, in its recent Economic Impact Study, discovered that using its platform to trade has enhanced significant growth in the revenues of SMEs across the country.

    According to the study, 91 per cent of businesses surveyed outlined the increased demand for their company’s goods/services, not only in their home country, but further afield.

    The study, conducted in partnership with Morning Consult Brand Intelligence, sampled over 1,000 SMEs across some sectors, including technology, services, manufacturing, retail and healthcare. Highlighting how communities like SMEs in Nigeria use the platform, and the effectiveness of social media as a growth tool, the results provided some interesting insights into usage and potential opportunities for local businesses.

    Commenting on the research, SMB Sales Manager EMEA Abi Williams said: “With rising access to the internet across Nigeria and the low cost of smartphones, digital platforms such as Facebook’s family of apps have become incredible mechanisms to build communities and foster relationships. With more SMEs leveraging digital tools to communicate and engage with existing and potential customers, there has never been so many opportunities to maximise growth and connect with relevant customers locally and globally.”

    Meanwhile, Facebook has announced the launch of Facebook Community Leadership Programme, a global initiative that invests in people building communities. The platform will commit millions of dollars to the programme, including up to $10 million in grants that will go directly to people creating and leading communities.

    In addition, Facebook introduced new tools for group administration and the expansion of the company’s London-based engineering team, which builds technology to help keep people safe on Facebook.

    Head of Groups and Community, Jennifer Dulski and Vice President, Product Partnerships Facebook, Ime Archibong, made the announcement at a forum tagged: Facebook Communities Summit Europe in London.

    Community leaders often tell Facebook that with additional support they can have more impact. The Facebook community leadership programme is designed to empower leaders from around the world, who are building communities through the Facebook family of apps and services.

    It includes: Residency and Fellowship opportunities, training, support and funding for community leaders from around the world.

    Up to five leaders will be selected to be community leaders in residence and awarded up to $1,000,000 each to fund their proposals.

    Up to 100 leaders will be selected for Facebook’s fellowship programme and will receive up to $50,000 each to be used for a specific community initiative.

    Community leadership circles bring local community leaders together to  connect, learn and collaborate. Facebook piloted three circles in the United States in 2017 and will be expanding globally this year.

    Groups for Facebook Power Admins, which Facebook currently runs with more than 10,000 group admins in the US and the United Kingdom (UK), are expanding to more members to help them share advice with one another and connect with our team to test new features and share feedback.

  • Facebook: ‘Users will see fewer posts from brands, companies’

    Facebook: ‘Users will see fewer posts from brands, companies’

    Facebook shares dropped on Friday after the company’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a change in its news feed to direct content from families and friends to which users are directly connected to.

    In a Facebook post on Thursday, Zuckerberg said the changes are needed because the news tool has shifted away from what it was intended to do which is to help people connect.

    ‘’It’s easy to understand how we got here. Video and other public content have exploded on Facebook in the past couple of years.

    Read Also: Facebook investigates temporary outage of WhatsApp messenger

    ‘’We feel a responsibility to make sure our services aren’t just fun to use, but also good for people’s well-being. So we’ve studied this trend carefully by looking at the academic research and doing our own research with leading experts at universities,’’Zuckerberg wrote.

    The changes will mean users will see fewer posts from brands and companies. Rather, users will see stories, videos and photographs from people to which they are already connected.

     

  • Indonesian islamists accuse Facebook of discrimination

    Indonesian islamists accuse Facebook of discrimination

    Several hundred Indonesian Islamists held a protest outside Facebook ’s headquarters in Jakarta on Friday, accusing the social media giant of discrimination.

    The protesters, many dressed in white and including members of the hardline Islamic Defenders Front ( FPI ), marched from a mosque to Facebook’s offices in the capital of the world’s biggest Muslim-majority country.

    They also accused Facebook of blocking some pages operated by hardline groups for allegedly spreading hate.

    “We want to remind Facebook to remain neutral and balanced,” Slamet Maarif, a spokesman for FPI, told reporters.

    “There are many accounts that spread hate about Islam, ulamas, that are allowed to operate. There are accounts that talk about Islamic humanitarian aid, those are blocked,” said Maarif.

    He said that the group still planned to use Facebook and intended to open new accounts.

    Facebook said its policy was to delete content that violated its community standards.

    “Our community standards are made to prevent organizations or individuals that urge hate speech or violence against those who hold different views,” said a company representative, who declined to be identified.

    A spokesman for Indonesia’s communications ministry, Semuel Pangerapan, said, “We have never requested that FPI’s accounts be closed.”

    Some Islamist groups in Indonesia use social media extensively and FPI usually has about 100 accounts on Facebook, as well as on other social media platforms such as Twitter.

    The rally was peaceful, though more than 1,200 police officers were brought in to guard the offices, media said.

    Indonesians are avid users of social media and Facebook had 115 million users in the second quarter of 2017, according to media citing its country manager, ranking the country fourth globally after the United States, India and Brazil.

    Some of the protesters on Friday made live video streams of the rally to air via Facebook.

    The vast majority of Indonesians practice a moderate form of Islam, though a reputation for religious tolerance has come under scrutiny as hardline groups muscle their way into public and political life in the young democracy.

    President Joko Widodo has expressed concerns over hoax stories and hate speech spread online and has pledged to “clobber” any group threatening to destroy Indonesia’s tradition of pluralism and moderate Islam.

    Also Read: Facebook to train 50,000 Nigerian SMEs in 2018

    At a rally late 2017 in Jakarta by Muslims opposing President Donald Trump’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, a body of Muslim clerics urged a boycott of U.S. and Israel products if Trump did not revoke his action.

    So far there has been no indication the measure will gain traction and Indonesia’s vice president said calls to stop using U.S. goods and technology were misguided.

    (Reuters/NAN)