EFTA01034155.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 267.1 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 10 pages
From: Intelligence Squared <info®intelligencesquared.com>
To: leevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Mark Zuckerberg on Trial: Villain or Visionary?
Date: Tue, 09 Apr 2019 09:09:04 +0000
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Mark Zuckerberg on Trial:
Facebook is Damaging Society
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Mark Zuckerberg on Trial: Facebook is Damaging Society
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TUESDAY 18 JUNE, 7PM
EMMANUEL CENTRE
Featuring Carole Cadwalladr, Damian Collins, Dex Torricke-
Barton, Ed Vaizey, Helen Lewis
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Zuck sucks. According to his critics, Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook,
presides over a company which is undermining our basic freedoms. It was
complicit in the spread of fake news and foreign interference in our elections,
and is partly to blame for the rise of political polarisation through its echo
chambers and filter bubbles. The company has been selling the private data of
millions of users around the world to select companies - most notoriously
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Cambridge Analytica, who used the information to meddle in the US
presidential elections and Britain's EU referendum. And Facebook was accused
of behaving like 'digital gangsters' by the House of Commons Digital Select
Committee, led by Damian Collins MP, who claimed Zuckerberg has willfully
misled lawmakers over fake news and data malpractice. Facebook is built on
an essentially unethical business model, and the buck stops with Zuck.
That's the case against Mark Zuckerberg. But let's keep things in perspective,
say his defenders. Facebook has done more than any other organisation in the
world to connect people through technology, allowing more than 2.2 billion
users so far — that's 30 percent of the world's population — to share their lives
with friends and family around the world — all for free. And let's not forget that
Facebook has been a vital tool for social and political organisation, from the
Arab Spring to Obama's presidential campaign. The world is a complex and
messy place and while it's convenient to scapegoat a single CEO for our
polarised politics, the fact is there were multiple causes for Brexit and Trump.
Of course, there are problems at Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg is keenly
aware of them. In January 2018, he made a promise to fix Facebook, admitting
that the organisation makes too many errors and listing his priorities as
'protecting our community from abuse and hate, defending against interference
by nation states, or making sure that time spent on Facebook is time well
spent'. Much of what we are reading about Facebook is old news. Zuckerberg
is essentially an idealist and we should at least give him the benefit of the doubt
as he seeks to rebuild the world's trust in Facebook.
That's the argument of Zuckerberg's defenders. But are they right? Join us on
June 18 hear the arguments and decide for yourself.
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Carole Cadwalladr
Award-winning investigative reporter for the Observer,
best known for her reporting on the Facebook data
breach and the links between Cambridge Analytica,
pro-Brexit campaigners and Donald Trump's
presidential election team. Her reporting led to the
downfall of Cambridge Analytica and a public apology
from Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg who was forced to
testify before congress.
Damian Collins
Conservative MP for Folkestone and Hythe and chair of
the House of Commons Digital, Culture, Media and
Sport Committee. He has played a key role in
parliamentary scrutiny of Facebook's activities,
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including invoking a rare parliamentary mechanism to
seize internal Facebook documents over the
Cambridge Analytica scandal.
Dex Torricke-Barton
Former head of executive communications for
Facebook. Over the last decade he has advised some
of Silicon Valley's most prominent leaders and
companies. He was Mark Zuckerberg's speechwriter
from 2012-16, and was previously executive
speechwriter for Google's Eric Schmidt. He has also
head of communications for SpaceX, Elon Musk's
rocket company.
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;i
t Ed Vaizey
Conservative MP for Wantage and Didcot, who served
as Minister for Culture, Communications and Creative
Industries from 2010 to 2016 under David Cameron.
Chair
Helen Lewis
Helen Lewis is associate editor of the New Statesman,
and has written on technology for the Sunday Times,
Wired and the Guardian. Her first book, Difficult
Women, is out next year.
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Viral Sensation Rutger Bregman On How Utopian Ideas Can Become Reality
Viral Sensation Rutger Bregman On How Utopian Ideas
Can Become Reality
This week's episode features Rutger Bregman, historian and author of Utopia for
Realists: And How We Can Get There. In conversation with Helen Lewis, associate
editor of the New Statesman, he discusses subjects ranging from Universal Basic
Income, the benefits of the four-day working week, climate change, and his solutions
for saving capitalism — plus his recent speech at Davos calling for higher taxes for
the rich, a video of which went viral.
LISTEN NOW
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- Created
- Feb 3, 2026