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Philippine journalist and Nobel laureate Maria Ressa speaks during an interview with AFP in Manila on January 8, 2025.
| Photo Credit: AFP
Ms. Ressa and the Rappler news site she co-founded have spent years fighting online disinformation while battling court cases filed under former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte after critical reporting of his deadly drug war.
The veteran journalist and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021 said Metaâs decision meant âextremely dangerous times aheadâ for journalism, democracy and social media users.
âMark Zuckerberg says itâs a free speech issue â thatâs completely wrong,â Ms. Ressa told AFP at Rapplerâs newsroom in Manila.
âOnly if youâre profit driven can you claim that; only if you want power and money can you claim that. This is about safety.â
Metaâs announcement on Tuesday (January 7, 2025) was seen by analysts as an attempt by Mr. Zuckerberg to appease U.S. President-elect Donald Trump before his inauguration this month.
Mr. Trump has been a harsh critic of Meta and Zuckerberg for years, accusing the company of bias against him and threatening to retaliate against the tech billionaire once back in office.
Fact-checking and disinformation research have long been a hot-button issue in a hyperpolarised political climate in the United States, with conservative U.S. advocates saying they were a tool to curtail free speech and censor right-wing content.
Ms. Ressa, who is also a U.S. citizen, rejected Mr. Zuckerbergâs assertion that fact-checkers had become âtoo politically biasedâ and âdestroyed more trust than theyâve createdâ.
âJournalists have a set of standards and ethics,â Ms. Ressa told AFP.
âWhat Facebook is going to do is get rid of that and then allow lies, anger, fear and hate to infect every single person on the platform,â she said.
Metaâs actions would lead to a âworld without factsâ and âthatâs a world thatâs right for a dictatorâ, Ms. Ressa warned.
âMark Zuckerberg has ultimate power,â she said, âand he chooses wrongly to prioritise profit, Facebookâs annual profits, over safety of the people on the platforms.â
âJust the beginningâ
Rappler is one of the partners working with Facebookâs fact-checking program.
AFP also currently works in 26 languages with Facebookâs fact-checking program, in which Facebook pays to use fact-checks from around 80 organisations globally on its platform, WhatsApp and on Instagram.
In a statement shared with AFP, Rappler said it intends to continue working with Facebook âto protect fellow Filipinos from manipulation and the dangers of disinformationâ.
âWhat has happened in the U.S. is just the beginning,â Rappler said.
âIt is an ominous sign of more perilous times in the fight to preserve and protect our individual agency and shared reality.â
Ms. Ressa has long maintained that the charges against her and Rappler were politically motivated after their critical reporting of the Mr. Duterte governmentâs policies, including its anti-drugs crackdown that killed thousands of people.
âMr. Trump, who vowed in his first post-election news conference to âstraighten outâ the âcorruptâ U.S. press, appeared to have taken a page from Mr. Duterteâs playbook,â Ms. Ressa said.
The incoming U.S. president has launched unprecedented lawsuits against newspapers and pollsters that observers worry are the signs of escalating intimidation and censorship tactics.
Ms. Ressa vowed to do everything she could to âensure information integrityâ.
âThe Nobel Prize said that you cannot have democracy if you donât have journalism,â Ms. Ressa said.
âThis is a pivotal year for journalismâs survival. Weâll do all we can to make sure that happens,â she said.
Published – January 08, 2025 07:06 pm IST
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