Mark
Zuckerberg says his "personal challenge" for 2018 is to fix Facebook.
The Facebook CEO has declared a goal each year since 2009. Past
challenges have included wearing a tie every day, learning to speak Mandarin
and eating meat only from animals he killed himself. Last year, he visited
every US state he hadn't been to yet.
This year, though, his challenge is directed at his company
rather than personal ambitions. Zuckerberg wrote that he wants to focus this
year on protecting Facebook users from abuse, defending against interference by
nation-states and "making sure that time spent on Facebook is time well
spent".
In other words, he wants to do his job as Facebook's CEO.
"This may not seem like a personal challenge on its face,
but I think I'll learn more by focusing intensely on these issues than I would
by doing something completely separate," Zuckerberg wrote. He added that
while Facebook won't prevent all mistakes or abuse, "we currently make too
many errors."
Facebook had a tough 2017. It testified before Congress about
Russian election meddling using its platform and drew harsh criticism from
early employees and investors about its role in the world.
But Zuckerberg also has little choice but to fix Facebook's
problems. Regulators in Washington, Europe and elsewhere are expecting concrete
results. And while the platform has more than two billion users, there is
nothing to guarantee they will stay and keep using Facebook as much as they do
now if they feel depressed, lied to with fake news and hoaxes and manipulated
by foreign powers.
Zuckerberg compared this year's challenge to the first one he
did nine years ago. It wasn't so much about him back then either, but about the
social platform he created. "That first year the economy was in a deep
recession and Facebook was not yet profitable. We needed to get serious about
making sure Facebook had a sustainable business model. It was a serious year,
and I wore a tie every day as a reminder," he wrote. "Today feels a
lot like that first year."
But fixing deep-rooted, existential problems is a taller order
than turning a profit.
Many of Facebook's problems are deeply rooted in how it's set up
and why it's been so successful, financially and otherwise. Its secret formulas
give users the content they are most likely to interact with and what's most
likely to keep them coming back for more. Sometimes, that's heartfelt posts by
their friends but other times it's viral fake news stories or inflammatory
comments about political candidates.
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