Mark Zuckerberg Turns His Back on the Media
The Meta CEO is abandoning his commitment to the truth in favor of a Trump-style playbook….


There was a time when Mark Zuckerberg didnât regard mainstream media as the enemy. He even allowed me, a card-carrying legacy media person, into his home. In April 2018, I ventured there to hear his plans to do the right thing. It was part of my years-long embed into Facebook to write a book. For the past two years, Zuckerbergâs company had been roundly criticized for its failure to rein in disinformation and hate speech. Now the young founder had a plan to address this.
Part of the solution, he told me, was more content moderation. He was going to hire many more humans to vet posts, even if it cost Facebook considerable capital. He would also amp up efforts to use artificial intelligence to proactively remove harmful content. âIt is no longer enough to give people tools to say what they want and then just let our community flag them and try to respond after the fact,â he told me as we sat in his sunroom. âWe need to get in there more and just take a more active role.â He admitted he had been slow to realize how damaging toxic content was on Facebook, but now he was committed to fixing the problem, even though it might take years. âI think we’re doing the right thing,â he told me, âItâs just that we should’ve done it sooner.â
Seven years later, Zuckerberg no longer thinks more moderation is the right thing. In a five-minute Reel, he characterized his actions to support it as a regretful cave-in to government jawboning about Covid and other subjects. He announced a shift away from content moderationâno more proactive takedowns and downranking of misinformation and hate speechâand the end of a fact-checking program that aimed to refute lies circulating on his platforms. Fact checks by trusted sources would be replaced by âcommunity notes,â a crowdsourcing approach where users provide alternate views on the veracity of posts. That technique is the exact thing that he told me in 2018 was ânot enough.â While he admits now his changes will allow âmore bad stuff,â he says that in 2025 it is worth it for more âfree expressionâ to thrive.
The policy shift was one of several moves that indicated that, whether or not Zuckerberg wanted to do this all along, Meta is positioning itself in sync with the new Trump administration. Youâve heard the litany, which has become a meme in itself. Meta promoted its top lobbyist, former GOP operative Joel Kaplan, to chief global affairs officer; he immediately appeared on Fox News (and only Fox News) to tout the new policies. Zuckerberg also announced that Meta would move employees who write and review content from California to Texas, to âhelp remove the concern that biased employees are overly censoring content.â He disbanded Metaâs DEI program. (Where is Sheryl Sandberg, who was so proud of Metaâs diversity effort. Sheryl? Sheryl?) And Meta changed some of its service terms specifically to allow users to degrade LGBTQ people.
Now that itâs been a week since Metaâs turnaroundâand my first take at Zuckerbergâs speechâI am particularly haunted by one aspect: He seems to have downranked the basic practice of classic journalism, characterizing it as no better than the nonreported observations from podcasters, influencers, and countless random people on his platforms. This was hinted at in his Reel when he repeatedly used the term âlegacy mediaâ as a pejorative: a force that, in his view, urges censorship and stifles free expression. All this time I thought the opposite!
A hint of his revised version of trustworthiness comes from the shift from fact-checkers to community notes. Itâs true that the fact-checking process wasnât working wellâin part because Zuckerberg didnât defend the checkers when ill-intentioned critics charged them with bias. Itâs also reasonable to expect community notes to be a useful signal that a post might be fallacious. But the power of refutation fails when participants in the conversation reject the idea that disagreements can be resolved by convincing evidence. Thatâs a core difference between fact-checkingâwhich Zuckerberg got rid ofâ and the community notes heâs implementing. The fact-checking worldview assumes that definitive facts, arrived at via research, talking to people, and sometimes even believing your own eyes, can be conclusive. The trick is recognizing authorities who have earned public confidence by pursuing truth. Community notes welcome alternate viewsâbut judging which ones are reliable is all up to you. Thereâs something to the canard that an antidote to bad speech is more speech. But if verifiable facts canât successfully refute easily disproven flapdoodle, weâre stuck in a suicidal quicksand of babel.
Thatâs the world that Donald Trump, Zuckerbergâs new role model, has consciously set about to realize. 60 Minutes reporter Leslie Stahl once asked Trump why he insulted reporters who were just doing their job. âYou know why I do it?â he responded. âI do it to discredit you all and demean you all so when you write negative stories about me, no one will believe you.â In 2021, Trump further revealed his intent to benefit from an attack on truth. âIf you say it enough and keep saying it, theyâll start to believe you,â he said during a rally. A corollary to that is if social media promotes falsehoods enough, people will believe those as well. Especially if formerly recognized authorities are discredited and demeaned.