Profits Before Trust: "Digital Platforms in Crisis" Report Details How Facebook, Google and Twitter Put Business Growth Ahead of Consumers

Profits Before Trust: "Digital Platforms in Crisis" Report Details How Facebook, Google and Twitter Put Business Growth Ahead of Consumers

Digital Citizens Alliance Calls on Companies to Accept Responsibility and Take New Steps to Clean Up Platforms and Restore Trust

Study Released as Majority of Americans Say that Facebook, Google and Twitter Are Not Responsible Companies Because They Place Profits Ahead of Doing the Right Thing

For First Time, Majority of Americans Say that Digital Platforms Should Be Regulated

WASHINGTON, April 10, 2018 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The crisis of trust facing digital platforms such as Facebook, Google and Twitter was a decade or more in the making caused by the companies' unwillingness to take responsibility for the content that appears on their sites, putting profits over trust and a legalistic approach to avoid accountability, according to a new Digital Citizens Alliance report entitled, "Digital Platforms in Crisis: Ten Years in the Making."

The report comes out as Facebook struggles to contain the crisis surrounding its role in the misuse of user' personal information, the rising outrage over inappropriate content on digital platforms and continued struggle to curb divisive and misleading political information.

Digital Citizens called on the platforms to acknowledge that the aggressively hands-off approach they took to policing content made it easy for criminals and other bad actors to operate. The group calls on the platforms to hire more monitors, create a system to identify and share information about bad actors, de-list or demote websites offering illicit goods and services and collaborate to create uniform basic privacy settings easily understood by users.

Revelations over the last two years of Russian efforts to manipulate the 2016 election, the misuse of users' personal information, objectionable content such as the spread of terrorist Jihadi videos has taken a toll on user trust in the platforms.

According to a Digital Citizens survey, a majority of Americans (51 percent) now say that Facebook, Google, and Twitter are not responsible companies "because they put making profits most of the time ahead of trying to do the right thing." And the number of Americans calling to regulate the platforms has increased from 35 percent to just over half (50 percent) in a month.

"For years Google, Facebook, Twitter and other platforms have been urged to take a greater responsibility for their actions, including the content that appears on their sites," said Tom Galvin, Executive Director of the Digital Citizens Alliance. "They largely ignored those warnings because there was too much money at stake. Criminals and bad actors noticed. Hopefully, as platforms now face a crisis in trust they will at last heed the warnings and take responsibility."

The "Digital Platforms in Crisis" report chronicles how digital platforms have resisted taking greater responsibility for what occurs on their platforms. For example, Google ignored calls over the last five years to take a more responsible approach to illegal and inappropriate content. For years, Google's stock response was that it would remove content when it was flagged by users. But Americans seem to reject that approach: 65 percent said that companies such as Google should take a more active role in monitoring and taking down inappropriate content on their own instead of relying on users to flag it.

Eighteen months after allegations it was manipulated to try to influence the 2016 election, Facebook continues to face criticism about the proliferation of fake and divisive content. But 58 percent of Americans said Facebook has been unsuccessful in cleaning up its platform.

Overall, 54 percent said that companies such as Facebook, Google, and Twitter brought their recent problems on themselves by not doing a good enough job policing their content. That's compared to 26 percent who said the problems were outside their control.

The "Digital Platforms in Crisis" report lays out a path forward to regain trust and create safe digital neighborhoods:

    --  Hiring of a more diverse multi-cultural workforce dedicated to
        identifying inappropriate content and illegal activities and then
        removing them. Digital Citizens has long noted that Google's technology
        enables it to place relevant ads even on inappropriate content. That
        algorithm could be deployed to flag suspicious content for inspection.
    --  Establishment of a cross-platform initiative to identify and ban bad
        actors. Digital Citizens has long advocated for while acknowledging it
        will pose technical and legal challenges. This could include analyzing
        usage data that they already collect to highlight behavior that is
        anomalous and suggests illicit, unlawful or illegal conduct.
    --  Platforms could create digital fingerprints of unlawful conduct that are
        shared across platforms to proactively block such conduct, as is done
        with child pornography. There is also the model used by casinos to
        identify cheats and share that information globally. Digital platforms
        would then have the capability to make decisions whether to de-list or
        demote websites offering illicit goods and services, and the ability to
        stop the spread of illegal behavior that victimizes its users.
    --  Digital platforms should collaborate to create uniform basic privacy
        settings that are easily understood by users. Internet users are
        generally at a loss at how their information is collected and
        disseminated.

"Regaining trust must start with an honest conversation with the American people about how these platforms have been used and misused," said Galvin. "I hope it happens because these platforms are part of fabric of society and we need them to be trusted."

The survey of 1,020 Americans included in the "Digital Platforms in Crisis" report was conducted by Survey Monkey from March 24-March 30 and has a margin of error of +/- 3 percent.

About the Digital Citizens Alliance
Digital Citizens is a coalition of consumers, businesses, and Internet experts focused on educating the public and policymakers on the threats people from all walks of life face on the Internet. Recent Digital Citizens initiatives include working with state attorneys general to educate citizens about the proper disposal of opioids and other dangerous drugs, a look into how new pirate devices and apps enable hackers to infect consumers' computers, and an investigation into how millions of college emails and passwords are for sale on the Dark Web. For more information please go to http://www.digitalcitizensalliance.org.

Contact: Adam Benson, 202.999.9104, adam@digitalcitizensalliance.org

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SOURCE Digital Citizens Alliance