Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg visits lawmakers amid push for tech oversight

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Facebook chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg visited lawmakers on Thursday (Sept 19) to discuss potential regulation of the tech industry, particularly when it comes to the collection of users' personal data on their platforms.

Zuckerberg is discussing oversight of the industry in private meetings with senators including Democrat Mark Warner, vice-chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee; Republican Mike Lee, a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Republican Josh Hawley, an outspoken conservative critic of Big Tech.

Congress has been debating a privacy law that could sharply rein in the ability of companies like Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple to collect and make money off users' personal data.

A national law, which would be the first of its kind in the US, could allow people to see or prohibit use of their data.

Acting pre-emptively, Zuckerberg last spring called for tighter regulations to protect consumers' data, control harmful online content, and ensure election integrity and data portability.

The Internet "needs new rules," he said.

Facebook, a social media giant with nearly 2.5 billion users, is under heavy scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators following a series of privacy scandals and amid accusations of abuse of its market power to squash competition.

The Justice Department, the Federal Trade Commission and the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee are all conducting antitrust investigations of the big tech companies, and a bipartisan group of state attorneys general has opened a competition probe specifically of Facebook.

It is Zuckerberg's first public visit to Washington since he testified before Congress last spring about privacy, election interference and other issues.

At Facebook's request, Warner helped organise a dinner meeting in Washington Wednesday night for Zuckerberg and a group of senators.

"The participants had a discussion touching on multiple issues, including the role and responsibility of social media platforms in protecting our democracy, and what steps Congress should take to defend our elections, protect consumer data, and encourage competition in the social media space," Rachel Cohen, a spokeswoman for Warner, said in a statement.

Warner and Hawley have proposed legislation that would force the tech giants to tell users what data they're collecting from them and how much it's worth.

The proposal goes to the heart of Big Tech's hugely profitable business model of commerce in users' personal data.

The companies gather vast data on what users read and like, and leverage it to help advertisers target their messages to individuals they want to reach.

The tech companies view with particular alarm a separate legislative proposal from Hawley that would require them to prove to regulators that they're not using political bias to filter content.

Failing to secure a bias-free audit from the government would mean a social media platform loses its long-held immunity from legal action.

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