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Facebook CEO: Company Was Too Slow to Respond to Pelosi Deepfake

Zuckerberg said Facebook made an “execution mistake” when it didn’t act fast enough to identify a doctored video of House Speaker.

Facebook CEO: Company Was Too Slow to Respond to Pelosi Deepfake
Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer and founder of Facebook Inc., speaks during a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said Wednesday that Facebook made an "execution mistake" when it didn’t act fast enough to identify a doctored video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last month.

Facebook CEO: Company Was Too Slow to Respond to Pelosi Deepfake

Zuckerberg, speaking at the Aspen Ideas Festival, said Facebook should have caught the video sooner, which was edited so that Pelosi looked like she was slurring her words. It took Facebook more than a day to label the video as "fake," at which point its distribution was limited by Facebook’s algorithms.

"It took a while for our systems to flag that and for fact-checkers to rate it as false," he said. "During that time, it got more distribution than our policies should have allowed."

Even though Facebook flagged the item as false and inhibited its distribution, the company didn’t remove it altogether. Pelosi criticized Facebook, suggesting that its decision was a sign the company may have “wittingly” helped the Russians spread misinformation during the 2016 US presidential election. Facebook is “lying to the public,” she said in a recent radio interview.

The doctored video has been described by some observers as a "cheapfake" or "deepfake," a new kind of misleading content that threatens to push online misinformation and digital election meddling to new depths.

More than 25 Democrats recently sent Zuckerberg a letter saying they were "concerned that you and your company are not taking these occurrences seriously and are grossly unprepared for the 2020 elections."

Zuckerberg said Facebook is considering a new policy on deepfake videos, and suggested the content might be held to a different standard than other types of fake news.

"There’s a question, though, about whether these deepfakes are actually just a completely different category of thing from normal kinds of false statements overall," he said. "There’s a very good case that they are."

To contact the reporter on this story: Kurt Wagner in San Francisco at kwagner71@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jillian Ward at jward56@bloomberg.net, Alistair Barr, Anne VanderMey

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.