字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Mark Zuckerberg has just testified to Congress for the first time in about a year. On this occasion the hearing in front of the House Financial Services Committee was ostensibly about Project Libra, Facebook's attempts to create a new global digital currency. However, only about half the members of the committee seem that interested in Project Libra, despite its potential to upend global monetary systems and even challenge the dominance of the dollar. On Libra itself, the Facebook chief will consider his job relatively well done. He sounded a note of humility, talking about if, not when the project would launch, and also admitting that Facebook was not necessarily the best message carrier here, given the host of other political controversies the company faces. It was when talking about those other political controversies that the Facebook chief executive came under the most pressure, however. On two notable occasions, he came under heavy fire from Democrats on the committee. The first of those occasions was when Joyce Beatty said she was unconvinced by the company's attempts to create a new civil rights task force. When told that Sheryl Sandberg, the company's chief operating officer, would be in charge of that task force, she said, come better than that for me. The second occasion was when rising star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez grilled the Facebook chief executive on which companies they use to fact check on the website. She revealed that one of them was the rightwing website Daily Caller, which caused Mr Zuckerberg to squirm visibly in his chair. Now, this week I want to try something new on the blog. Each week I'm going to attempt to answer one of our readers' or viewers' questions. This week the question is from Ursula Green. Ursula asks, what exactly can regulators do to stop Project Libra if they want to? Well, Ursula, the answer is they don't have to do anything at all. Facebook, and now Project Libra, have said that they will not launch this currency without the go-ahead from regulators, both in the US and Europe. Other companies might choose to launch such a product and simply challenge regulators to take action against it, but Facebook and Project Libra have now ruled that out. So that option isn't open to them. Thanks very much for the question. And if anybody would like to ask a question to be answered in a future blog, please do so in the comments section below.
B1 中級 馬克-扎克伯格的證詞:是什麼讓Facebook的負責人扭捏不已?| 科技洗禮 (Mark Zuckerberg testimony: what left the Facebook chief squirming? | Tech Wash) 2 0 林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字