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White House looks to cool battle with Facebook | TheHill


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Facebook Monday

Positivity     37.00%   
   Negativity   63.00%
The New York Times
SOURCE: http://thehill.com/policy/technology/563783-white-house-looks-to-cool-battle-with-facebook
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Summary

That’s what I meant.”White House press secretary Jen PsakiJen PsakiBiden seeks to prove his skeptics wrong Feds step up pressure on social media over false COVID-19 claims Hypocritical Psaki leads chilling effort to flag 'misinformation' MORE stressed throughout a briefing with reporters that the administration was not “at war” with the technology giant and that the coronavirus was a common enemy.Psaki would not specify whether White House officials and Facebook officials spoke over the weekend, only saying the administration is in regular contact with social media companies.“We are at war with the virus, and we have been in regular touch since the beginning of the administration as we knew that there are a range of entities, platforms, media organizations, public officials who all have a role in combating misinformation,” Psaki said. Marsha BlackburnMarsha BlackburnGOP senators invite Yellen to brief them on debt ceiling expiration, inflation Senate Republicans attack circuit court pick over voting rights advocacy Blackburn: 'Taylor Swift would be the first victim' of socialism, Marxism MORE (R-Tenn.) and Josh HawleyJoshua (Josh) David HawleyGraham, Hawley call on Judiciary Committee to hold hearing on US-Mexico border Biden ICE nominee pledges to uphold agreements with local law enforcement Navy secretary nominee pledges to be 'exclusively focused on the China threat' MORE (R-Mo.) both seized on those comments to claim collusion between the administration and social media.When asked about potential regulatory action against Facebook Monday, Psaki punted the question to Congress while noting that nothing is off the table.Sen. Amy KlobucharAmy KlobucharKlobuchar urges limits on protections for Big Tech Klobuchar: If Breyer is going to retire from Supreme Court, it should be sooner rather than later Feds step up pressure on social media over false COVID-19 claims MORE (D-Minn.) over the weekend re-upped her proposal to tweak online platforms’s liability protections to hold them accountable for content posted on their websites that pose harm to individuals, like coronavirus misinformation.Barrett suggested that Congress could authorize the Federal Trade Commission to sit down with platforms to iron out content moderation transparency rules.

As said here by Chris Mills Rodrigo and Brett Samuels