In an attempt to get ahead of reporting that will seemingly make Facebookâalready reeling from weeks of revelations from a whistleblowerâsomehow look even worse, the company has adopted an increasingly popular strategy among some corporations: posting through it.On Monday, John PinetteâFacebook's Vice President of Global Communicationsâtweeted a short thread from the companyâs official Twitter account casting aspersions on dozens of journalists getting ready to report a series of articles based on âthousands of pagesâ of documents from the company.âWe expect the press to hold us accountable, given our scale and role in the world. But when reporting misrepresents our actions and motivations, we believe we should correct the record,â Facebook said. âOver the last 6 weeks, including over the weekend, weâve seen how documents can be mischaracterized. Obviously, not every employee at Facebook is an executive; not every opinion is the companyâs position.âFor weeks, the company has been experimenting with how to undermine the impact of the internal documents secured by whistleblower Frances Haugen before she quit and blew the whistle publicly, testifying in front of a Senate subcommittee (it is unclear whether these documents come from Haugen). The company has tried characterizing the documents as "stolen,â and toyed with emphasizing that Haugen did not work on this or that specific team and thus did not have an expert opinion on the documents she leaked. Those lines have mostly fallen flat, and so Facebookâs new strategy is to suggest a malicious conspiracy among journalists out to get the company. âRight now 30+ journalists are finishing up a coordinated series of articles based on thousands of pages of leaked documents,â Facebook tweeted. âWe hear that to get the docs, outlets had to agree to the conditions and a schedule laid down by the PR team that worked on earlier leaked docs.âThe thing is, Facebook is decrying a practice that Facebook itself (and pretty much any other company, scientific journal, publisher⊠the list goes on) regularly engages in with journalists in order to control information releases: the embargo. It is common for various entities to distribute information to journalists on the condition that they donât publish before a certain time. This doesnât mean that the information is somehow suspect by default, or that it will be reported on in an uncritical manner. Facebook surely knows what an embargo is, because it regularly issues them, expects reporters or outlets to adhere to them, and will quickly ignore reporters who break them. If you see a lot of news outlets publish detailed articles about a specific thing at a specific time, is it likely they were subject to an embargo. This practice is controversial but extremely common. On one hand, itâs a way for companies to control the spread of information and to gatekeep who has access to it. On the other, embargoes allow journalists time to report out a story before it âbreaks,â often resulting in more detailed and thorough articles.âA curated selection out of millions of documents at Facebook can in no way be used to draw fair conclusions about us,â the company adds. âInternally, we share work in progress and debate options. Not every suggestion stands up to the scrutiny we must apply to decisions affecting so many people.âOne solution to this problem would be for Facebook to be fully transparent and hand over those documents. Instead, Pinette suggests another solution: âTo those news organizations who would like to move beyond an orchestrated âgotchaâ campaign, we are ready to engage on the substance.â In other words, Facebook would be happy to work with you⊠provided, of course, you agree to conditions and a schedule laid down by its PR team.
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