The Senate
Intelligence Committee has asked top tech companies Google, Facebook and
Twitter to testify about Russian interference in US politics, a Senate aide
confirmed Wednesday.
The three
internet and online social media giants are expected to appear on November 1 in
an open hearing on the rising evidence that they were covertly manipulated in a
campaign to help Donald Trump win the presidency.
Before that
they could also testify in the House Intelligence Committee: Representatives
Mike Conaway and Adam Schiff, who lead the committee’s Russia probe, announced
late Wednesday they too had invited representatives of technology firms to
testify on Russian manipulation.
“Congress
and the American people need to hear this important information directly from
these companies,” they said.
Facebook
recently revealed that for just $100,000, apparent Russia-linked buyers placed
some 3,000 advertisements on its pages last year that appeared aimed at
influencing the election.
Facebook has
turned the details of those ads over to investigators. According to reports,
the ads sought to boost the Democratic and Republican rivals of then-election
frontrunner Hillary Clinton, as well as to sow discord among Americans in ways
that would damage Clinton’s voter base.
“The vast
majority of ads run by these accounts didn’t specifically reference the US
presidential election, voting or a particular candidate,” Facebook Chief
Security Officer Alex Stamos said early this month.
“Rather, the
ads and accounts appeared to focus on amplifying divisive social and political
messages across the ideological spectrum — touching on topics from LGBT matters
to race issues to immigration to gun rights.”
Google, a
unit of Alphabet, has said it was not used in the alleged Russian campaign to
steer the US election.
But
according to Buzzfeed, its automated ad-targeting system lets advertisers
direct ads to people using racist and anti-Semitic search terms.
Twitter
meanwhile has been shown to be a dense thicket of easily faked accounts and
news items that allowed alleged Russian operatives to pump out politically
divisive and anti-Clinton tweets.
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