Loading...

26 May 2026 20:38

Advertising & Marketing

Four Ideas to Regulate the Internet

Four Ideas to Regulate the Internet

Four Ideas to Regulate the Internet

Four Ideas to Regulate the InternetTechnology is a major part of our lives, and companies such as Facebook have immense responsibilities. Every day we make decisions about what speech is harmful, what constitutes political advertising, and how to prevent sophisticated cyberattacks. These are important for keeping our community safe. But if we were starting from scratch, we wouldn’t ask companies to make these judgments alone.

I believe we need a more active role for governments and regulators. By updating the rules for the internet, we can preserve what’s best about it — the freedom for people to express themselves and for entrepreneurs to build new things — while also protecting society from broader harms.

From what I’ve learned, I believe we need new regulation in four areas: harmful content, election integrity, privacy and data portability.

First, harmful content. Facebook gives everyone a way to use their voice, and that creates real benefits — from sharing experiences to growing movements. As part of this, we have a responsibility to keep people safe on our services. That means deciding what counts as terrorist propaganda, hate speech and more. We continually review our policies with experts, but at our scale we’ll always make mistakes and decisions that people disagree with.

Lawmakers often tell me we have too much power over speech, and frankly I agree. I’ve come to believe that we shouldn’t make so many important decisions about speech on our own. So we’re creating an independent body so people can appeal our decisions. We’re also working with governments, including French officials, on ensuring the effectiveness of content review systems.

Internet companies should be accountable for enforcing standards on harmful content. It’s impossible to remove all harmful content from the internet, but when people use dozens of different sharing services — all with their own policies and processes — we need a more standardized approach.

One idea is for third-party bodies to set standards governing the distribution of harmful content and measure companies against those standards. Regulation could set baselines for what’s prohibited and require companies to build systems for keeping harmful content to a bare minimum.

Facebook already publishes transparency reports on how effectively we’re removing harmful content. I believe every major internet service should do this quarterly, because it’s just as important as financial reporting. Once we understand the prevalence of harmful content, we can see which companies are improving and where we should set the baselines.

Second, legislation is important for protecting elections. Facebook has already made significant changes around political ads: Advertisers in many countries must verify their identities before purchasing political ads. We built a searchable archive that shows who pays for ads, what other ads they ran and what audiences saw the ads. However, deciding whether an ad is political isn’t always straightforward. Our systems would be more effective if regulation created common standards for verifying political actors.

Online political advertising laws primarily focus on candidates and elections, rather than divisive political issues where we’ve seen more attempted interference. Some laws only apply during elections, although information campaigns are nonstop. And there are also important questions about how political campaigns use data and targeting. We believe legislation should be updated to reflect the reality of the threats and set standards for the whole industry.

Third, effective privacy and data protection needs a globally harmonized framework. People around the world have called for comprehensive privacy regulation in line with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, and I agree. I believe it would be good for the internet if more countries adopted regulation such as GDPR as a common framework.

New privacy regulation in the United States and around the world should build on the protections GDPR provides. It should protect your right to choose how your information is used — while enabling companies to use information for safety purposes and to provide services. It shouldn’t require data to be stored locally, which would make it more vulnerable to unwarranted access. And it should establish a way to hold companies such as Facebook accountable by imposing sanctions when we make mistakes.

I also believe a common global framework — rather than regulation that varies significantly by country and state — will ensure that the internet does not get fractured, entrepreneurs can build products that serve everyone, and everyone gets the same protections.

As lawmakers adopt new privacy regulations, I hope they can help answer some of the questions GDPR leaves open. We need clear rules on when information can be used to serve the public interest and how it should apply to new technologies such as artificial intelligence.

Finally, regulation should guarantee the principle of data portability. If you share data with one service, you should be able to move it to another. This gives people choice and enables developers to innovate and compete.

This is important for the internet — and for creating services people want. It’s why we built our development platform. True data portability should look more like the way people use our platform to sign into an app than the existing ways you can download an archive of your information. But this requires clear rules about who’s responsible for protecting information when it moves between services.

This also needs common standards, which is why we support a standard data transfer format and the open source Data Transfer Project.

I believe Facebook has a responsibility to help address these issues, and I’m looking forward to discussing them with lawmakers around the world. We’ve built advanced systems for finding harmful content, stopping election interference and making ads more transparent. But people shouldn’t have to rely on individual companies addressing these issues by themselves. We should have a broader debate about what we want as a society and how regulation can help. These four areas are important, but, of course, there’s more to discuss.

The rules governing the internet allowed a generation of entrepreneurs to build services that changed the world and created a lot of value in people’s lives. It’s time to update these rules to define clear responsibilities for people, companies and governments going forward.

 

Written By Mark Zuckerberg, CEO, Facebook

(Visited 6 times, 1 visits today)
peri hokiperihokiduta 76AWSBEThttps://sintnicolaasschool.com/https://abc1131aa.com/kincir88cakar76Slot mahjonghttps://www.abc1131.it.com/stc76duta76duta76bduta76 sejiwaduta76 lokasiterdekatduta76 africafuelduta76 oscarmykeduta76 naptimepkduta76 daikinduta76 raes-munichduta76 destyduta76 bio-linkduta76 lynkduta76 heylinkduta76 bioduta76 radarkeduanalisis algoritma mahjong ways 2 vs wins 3evolusi fitur scatter hitam mahjongstrategi pola tumble mahjong ways 2data rtp mahjong wins 3 vs klasikmitos fakta mekanika scatter hitamanalisis statistik gates of olympus pola harian stabilderivasi statistik mahjongways variabilitas pola berbasis dataevaluasi data multilayer neural starlight princess adaptif sistemfluktuasi pengembalian kinerja server real time pemula permainanlogika algoritma mahjong ways menurut pakar data modernmetrik rtp live server mahjong ways 2 analisis akuratpergerakan sistem mahjong ways 2 distribusi pola multilayerquantisasi pola jam aktif mahjongways analisis mikrostrategi berbasis data rtp live pg soft akuratstruktur grafik simbol wild bounty showdown berbeda gameperubahan jam gates of olympus 1000pendekatan rtp wild bandito dinamisanalisis probabilitas mahjong winscara baca pola mahjong ways 2 rtp livemahjong wins 3 analisis pola scatter wildstarlight princess 1000 analisis rtp livevariansi wild bounty showdownpemodelan rtp mahjong ways 2mahjong wins pola cuan vs rtp analysismahjong ways distribusi scatter emas probabilistikanalisis algoritma mahjong ways 2 2026strategi membaca pola mahjong wins 3mitos scatter hitam jackpot asliperbandingan mahjong ways 2 wins 3tips kelola saldo scatter hitamfitur baru mahjong wins 3 terupdatewaktu terbaik main mahjong ways 2psikologi pemain scatter hitamtrik optimalisasi bet mahjong wins 3evolusi fitur mahjong ways 2 terbaruanalisis volatilitas mahjong ways 2 jam tertentustrategi tumble features mahjong wins 3fakta algoritma scatter hitam terbaruuji efektivitas pola spin mahjong ways 2penjelasan teknikal multiplier dinamis mahjong wins 3analisis statistik gates of olympus pola konsisten hariancara komunitas batas waktu harian mahjong wins 3mengungkap logika free spin wild bounty showdown data terbarurahasia pemetaan multilayer mahjong ways 2 distribusi angkateknik komunitas variabilitas metrik sweet bonanza presisigates olympus grafik linear malammahjong ways 2 distribusi simbol tinggimahjong ways scatter hitam jarang munculmengukur elastisitas pola lucky neko fase algoritmastarlight princess kompresi gambar engine seluleraztec gems pola matriks grid simbolmahjong ways 2 kepadatan server waktu akseswild bounty showdown prediksi putaran gratisgates of olympus variabilitas engine jam aktifpg soft validasi log server hari inisweet bonanza formasi simbol unik pemainmahjong ways 2 rtp multilayer akuratmahjong ways analisis free spin durasisweet bonanza grid simbol komunitasgates of olympus server scatter multipliermahjong wins 3 multiplier beruntunwild bounty showdown pola perilaku jampg soft trafik jaringan algoritma terbarustatistik modern fluktuasi rtp livesweet bonanza grid variabilitas kombinasimahjong ways 2 pemetaan multilayer barismahjong ways transisi gambar free spinmahjong wins 3 multiplier berurutan Top