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Mark Zuckerberg, profile picture

The US elections are just two months away, and with Covid-19 affecting communities across the country, I'm concerned about the challenges people could face when voting. I'm also worried that with our nation so divided and election results potentially taking days or even weeks to be finalized, there could be an increased risk of civil unrest across the country.

This election is not going to be business as usual. We all have a responsibility to protect our democracy. That means helping people register and vote, clearing up confusion about how this election will work, and taking steps to reduce the chances of violence and unrest.

Facebook is already running the largest voting information campaign in American history -- with a goal of helping 4 million people to register and then vote. In just three days, we already drove almost 24 million clicks to voter registration websites. Priscilla and I have also personally donated $300 million to non-partisan organizations supporting states and local counties in strengthening our voting infrastructure.

Today, we're announcing additional steps we're taking at Facebook to encourage voting, connect people with authoritative information, and fight misinformation. These changes reflect what we've learned from our elections work over the past four years and the conversations we've had with voting rights experts and our civil rights auditors:

• We will put authoritative information from our Voting Information Center at the top of Facebook and Instagram almost every day until the election. This will include video tutorials on how to vote by mail, and information on deadlines for registering and voting in your state.

• We're going to block new political and issue ads during the final week of the campaign. It's important that campaigns can run get out the vote campaigns, and I generally believe the best antidote to bad speech is more speech, but in the final days of an election there may not be enough time to contest new claims. So in the week before the election, we won't accept new political or issue ads. Advertisers will be able to continue running ads they started running before the final week and adjust the targeting for those ads, but those ads will already be published transparently in our Ads Library so anyone, including fact-checkers and journalists, can scrutinize them.

• We're going to extend our work with election officials to remove misinformation about voting. We already committed to partnering with state election authorities to identify and remove false claims about polling conditions in the last 72 hours of the campaign, but given that this election will include large amounts of early voting, we're extending that period to begin now and continue through the election until we have a clear result. We've already consulted with state election officials on whether certain voting claims are accurate.

• We're reducing the risk of misinformation and harmful content going viral by limiting forwarding on Messenger. You'll still be able to share information about the election, but we'll limit the number of chats you can forward a message to at one time. We've already implemented this in WhatsApp during sensitive periods and have found it to be an effective method of preventing misinformation from spreading in many countries.

• We're expanding our voter suppression policies. We already remove explicit misrepresentations about how or when to vote that could cause someone to lose their opportunity to vote -- for example, saying things like "you can send in your mail ballot up to 3 days after election day", which is obviously not true. (In most states, mail-in ballots have to be *received* by election day, not just mailed, in order to be counted.) We're now expanding this policy to include implicit misrepresentations about voting too, like "I hear anybody with a driver's license gets a ballot this year", because it might mislead you about what you need to do to get a ballot, even if that wouldn't necessarily invalidate your vote by itself.

• We're putting in place rules against using threats related to Covid-19 to discourage voting. We will remove posts with claims that people will get Covid-19 if they take part in voting. We'll attach a link to authoritative information about Covid-19 to posts that might use the virus to discourage voting, and we're not going to allow this kind of content in ads. Given the unique circumstances of this election, it's especially important that people have accurate information about the many ways to vote safely, and that Covid-19 isn't used to scare people into not exercising their right to vote.

Since the pandemic means that many of us will be voting by mail, and since some states may still be counting valid ballots after election day, many experts are predicting that we may not have a final result on election night. It's important that we prepare for this possibility in advance and understand that there could be a period of intense claims and counter-claims as the final results are counted. This could be a very heated period, so we're preparing the following policies to help in the days and weeks after voting ends:

• We'll use the Voting Information Center to prepare people for the possibility that it may take a while to get official results. This information will help people understand that there is nothing illegitimate about not having a result on election night.

• We're partnering with Reuters and the National Election Pool to provide authoritative information about election results. We'll show this in the Voting Information Center so it's easily accessible, and we'll notify people proactively as results become available. Importantly, if any candidate or campaign tries to declare victory before the results are in, we'll add a label to their post educating that official results are not yet in and directing people to the official results.

• We will attach an informational label to content that seeks to delegitimize the outcome of the election or discuss the legitimacy of voting methods, for example, by claiming that lawful methods of voting will lead to fraud. This label will provide basic authoritative information about the integrity of the election and voting methods.

• We'll enforce our violence and harm policies more broadly by expanding our definition of high-risk people to include election officials in order to help prevent any attempts to pressure or harm them, especially while they're fulfilling their critical obligations to oversee the vote counting.

• We've already strengthened our enforcement against militias, conspiracy networks like QAnon, and other groups that could be used to organize violence or civil unrest in the period after the elections. We have already removed thousands of these groups and removed even more from being included in our recommendations and search results. We will continue to ramp up enforcement against these groups over the coming weeks.

It's important to recognize that there may be legitimate concerns about the electoral process over the coming months. We want to make sure people can speak up if they encounter problems at the polls or have been prevented from voting, but that doesn't extend to spreading misinformation. We'll enforce the policies I outlined above as well as all our existing policies around voter suppression and voting misinformation, but to ensure there are clear and consistent rules, we are not planning to make further changes to our election-related policies between now and the official declaration of the result.

In addition to all of this, four years ago we encountered a new threat: coordinated online efforts by foreign governments and individuals to interfere in our elections. This threat hasn't gone away. Just this week, we took down a network of 13 accounts and 2 pages that were trying to mislead Americans and amplify division. We've invested heavily in our security systems and now have some of the most sophisticated teams and systems in the world to prevent these attacks. We've removed more than 100 networks worldwide engaging in coordinated inauthentic behavior over the past couple of years, including ahead of major democratic elections. However, we're increasingly seeing attempts to undermine the legitimacy of our elections from within our own borders.

I believe our democracy is strong enough to withstand this challenge and deliver a free and fair election -- even if it takes time for every vote to be counted. We've voted during global pandemics before. We can do this. But it's going to take a concerted effort by all of us -- political parties and candidates, election authorities, the media and social networks, and ultimately voters as well -- to live up to our responsibilities. We all have a part to play in making sure that the democratic process works, and that every voter can make their voice heard where it matters most -- at the ballot box.

DK Dinker, profile picture
DK Dinker
Nation is not divided. Facebook should remain neutral. That's all.
3 yrsReport
Tina Joy Carroll, profile picture
Tina Joy Carroll
I think you should stick to social media and stay out of elections. There is absolutely NO reason people can’t vote. Especially with the new CDC report showing less that 10k people actually dies from covid. All that the radical left and Facebook have done is WAKE PEOPLE UP!!
3 yrsReport
Jack Windsor, profile picture
Jack Windsor
Your $300M will, still, not silence the truth; nor will it influence our elections.
Btw, choose a side - social platform or publisher.
3 yrsReport
Ethan Stock, profile picture
Ethan Stock
Thanks Mark. This is a great set of initiatives and a clear message that Facebook stands on the side of democracy.
3 yrsReport
Leah Barkhuff, profile picture
Leah Barkhuff
Wait, wait, wait.... you're going to talk about civil rights while censoring posts that don't align with your political views?
3 yrsReport
Ali Partovi, profile picture
Ali Partovi
Thank you for these measures, Mark.
3 yrsReport
James Duong, profile picture
James Duong
Mark I thought you were a great guy but stop trying to help Democrats and fact check everything that people post. Why not fact check the fake news. This is really sad how Facebook is trying to interfere with elections that’s not right. I hope lawyers out there please look into this. Fake news no fact check real news fact check include WHO video. Facebook should focus on social media not politics
3 yrsReport
Courtney Desiree, profile picture
Courtney Desiree
FB: This is censorship at it’s finest!! Let free thinking people decide for themselves what is fact or what is false!
Your “fact checkers” are obviously progressive liberals who are going after conservative view points!
Let people think for themselves, to challenge opposing opinions on their own! Stay off my lawn!
3 yrsReport
Dean Grubbs, profile picture
Dean Grubbs
The United States is not a Democracy. Our Country is a Constitutional Republic. There are important distinctions.
3 yrsReport
Rick LaBanca, profile picture
Rick LaBanca
Hate this but Facebook at least is finally admitting it’s not neutral and that it’s as much a publisher as the nyt.
3 yrsReport
Kelly Shephard Tracy, profile picture
Kelly Shephard Tracy
You cannot be trusted! Stop blocking ads and content that go against your views. Plus, we can all vote in person. If masks work, like fb says they do, and we can shop and go out to eat....Oh and let’s not forget all the rioting, then we can vote in person!! Stop trying to scare everyone. You’re actions are criminal.
3 yrsReport
Linda Marie Foster, profile picture
Linda Marie Foster
Our voting process has worked for many, many years without social media help. All you are doing is adding to the problem of FRAUD in our voting system. If someone is not smart enough to figure out how they should vote without all your millions of dollars being shoved down their throats then perhaps they should wait a few years and learn what our country is all about.
3 yrsReport
Schultz Eric Deb, profile picture
Schultz Eric Deb
There is no reason we can’t vote in person. Those with comprised immune systems should of course vote absentee ballots but everyone else, go to the polls!!!
Don’t let the media of any kind scare you!
3 yrsReport
Stephen Cartwright, profile picture
Stephen Cartwright
Voting has nothing to do with you as a company, cast your vote and stop complaining. People have fought wars to protect our right to vote, I think we can handle going outside for a few hours. It better be business as usual in the eyes of the constitution or we have a problem
3 yrsReport
Lori Campbell, profile picture
Lori Campbell
Then stop trying to influence the election by silencing one party if you truly want to protect our democracy. Just encourage people to vote.
3 yrsReport
Paula Stoner, profile picture
Paula Stoner
But are you fair and unbiased ?? From what I have seen from your postings and censoring you are not . You can save democracy by promoting conservatives as you do liberals and democrats
3 yrsReport
Carlos Morales, profile picture
Carlos Morales
You can try to control this election, but you will fail.

We the silent majority are on to you.
3 yrsReport
Erica Duncan, profile picture
Erica Duncan
There will be no fear mongering. I believe you’re trying to manipulate people and you’re obviously on the left side. Trying to silence and remove republican ads. Taking away freedom of speech. Disgusting. You have absolutely no business interfering with the political game. NO business. It is NOT YOUR PLACE. I’m voting in person! If I can grocery shop, work, go to church, go to Lowe’s/any store... I can sure as heck vote in person. There will be no fear.
3 yrsReport
Ayush Kumar, profile picture
Ayush Kumar
So proud of you Sir, you are the only PM who has all positive visions and doing good for our Nation. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
3 yrsReport
Melissa Bair, profile picture
Melissa Bair
I'm rather bothered by the fact that Facebook seems to be violating the first ammendment, as a publicly traded company you are not private and it should not be allowed as it appears that the only things censored are Republican ideas and thing not extreme left or left thinking, please correct me if I'm wrong,but this looks very biased and as a SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORM you should allow free speech regardless of truth, newspapers allow opinions all the time opinions are not facts
3 yrsReport
Donnie Barnes, profile picture
Donnie Barnes
Yes lay the road map of the lefts plans there all saying the same shit were not gonna lose and were gonna be in a civil war yes we here thats what yall want us to do is attack Republicans yes we know wink nod . Trump 2020 all the way.
3 yrsReport
Janice Swendseid, profile picture
Janice Swendseid
In other words you are controlling conservatives during this election process. It won't work.
3 yrsReport
Allan Horner, profile picture
Allan Horner
How thoughtful! Zuckerberg is warning us in advance that he plans to do massive censorship! It's just coincidental that the vast majority of that censorship will be against Pro-Trump or conservative comments.
3 yrsReport
Ruben van Galen, profile picture
Ruben van Galen
Trying to save democracy while destroying free speech at the same time? That won't work!
3 yrsReport
Mohini Cooner, profile picture
Mohini Cooner
You are blatantly supporting the Democrats and blocking ads from the Republicans. Money is all you can show. Donations are not announced publicly if you want to help the country. You are causing divisions in this country. Your job should be to unite the people.
3 yrsReport
James Dee, profile picture
James Dee
"Facebook is already running the largest voting information campaign in American history"..

You spelt disinformation wrong.

I suppose it doesn't feel like disinformation to you if you only allow one side to have a voice I guess.
Absolute joke that silicone valley is now the moral arbiter of truth.
3 yrsReport
Glenn Schwalbe, profile picture
Glenn Schwalbe
How about you stop shutting down the silent majority groups!
3 yrsReport
Andy Goldstrom, profile picture
Andy Goldstrom
Social media has fueled all the division. Unintended consequences of advances in technology. Next frontier is AI.
3 yrsReport
Elsie Hickman, profile picture
Elsie Hickman
Mark, I am a FB user and a stock holder. I am beginning to be concerned that you are blocking conservative view points, and a conservative message in the upcoming election. I've always liked that FB took an even handed approach, while keeping out those inciting violence or hatred, but I am now concerned that the political even handedness is falling by the wayside, and those that present the more liberal perspective are being allowed to flourish, even when their message is inciting violence and hatred.
3 yrsReport
Noah Kwiek, profile picture
Noah Kwiek
Stop blocking POLITICAL adds and content then That go against your views. Let folks use this platform as you had originally wanted it for before you become a rich guy.
3 yrsReport