Can Silicon Valley’s Autocrats Save Democracy? – Honolulu Civil Beat
In late February, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg published an essay that laid out the social networks vision for the coming years.
The 5,700-word document, immediately dubbed a manifesto, was his most extensive discussion of Facebooks place in the social world since it went public in 2012. Although it reads to me in places like a senior honors thesis in sociology, with broad-brush claims about the evolution of society and heavy reliance on terms like social infrastructure, it makes some crucial points.
In particular, Zuckerberg outlined five domains where Facebook intended to develop the social infrastructure to give people the power to build a global community that works for all of us. This included making communities supportive, safe, informed, civically engaged and inclusive.
Silicon Valley has long been mocked for this kind of our products make the world a better place rhetoric, so much so that some companies are asking their employees to rein it in. Still, while apps for sending disappearing selfies or summoning on-street valet parking may not exactly advance civilization, Facebook and a handful of other social media platforms are undoubtedly influential in shaping political engagement.
A case in point is the Egyptian revolution in 2011. One of the leaders of the uprising created a Facebook page that became a focal point for organizing opposition to ousted leader Hosni Mubaraks regime. He later told CNN:
I want to meet Mark Zuckerberg one day and thank him This revolution started on Facebook.
As I have written elsewhere, Facebook and Twitter have become essential tools in mobilizing contemporary social movements, from changing the corporate world to challenging national governments. Zuckerbergs manifesto suggests he aims to harness Facebook in this way and empower the kind of openness and widespread participation necessary to strengthen democracy.
But while hes right that social media platforms could reinvigorate the democratic process, I believe Facebook and its Silicon Valley brethren are the wrong ones to spearhead such an effort.
The HBO show Silicon Valley focuses on skewering the industrys inflated sense of itself.
The initial reaction to Zuckerbergs manifesto was largely negative.
The Atlantic described it as a blueprint for destroying journalism by turning Facebook into a news organization without journalists. Bloomberg View referred to it as a scary, dystopian document to transform Facebook into an extraterritorial state run by a small, unelected government that relies extensively on privately held algorithms for social engineering.
Whatever the merits of these critiques, Zuckerberg is correct about one central issue: Internet and mobile technology could and should be used to enable far more extensive participation in democracy than most of us encounter.
In the United States, democracy can feel remote and intermittent, and sees only limited participation. The 2016 election, which pitted radically different visions for the future of democracy against each other, attracted only 60 percent of eligible voters. In the midterm elections between presidential campaigns, turnout drops sharply, even though the consequences can be equally profound.
Moreover, whereas voting is compulsory and nearly universal in countries such as Brazil and Australia, legislators in the U.S. are actively trying to discourage voting by raising barriers to participation through voter ID laws, sometimes targeted very precisely at depressing black turnout.
Democratic participation in the U.S. could use some help, and online technologies could be part of the solution.
The social infrastructure for our democracy was designed at a time when the basic logistics of debating issues and voting were costly.
Compare the massive effort it took to gather and tabulate paper ballots for national elections during the time of Abraham Lincoln with the instantaneous global participation that takes place every day on social media. The transaction costs for political mobilization have never been lower. If appropriately designed, social media could make democracy more vibrant by facilitating debate and action.
Consider how one Facebook post germinated one of the largest political protests in American history, the Jan. 21 Womens March in Washington and many other cities around the world. But getting people to show up at a demonstration is different from enabling people to deliberate and make collective decisions that is, to participate in democracy.
Todays information and communication technologies (ICTs) could make it possible for democracy to happen on a daily basis, not just in matters of public policy but at work or at school. Democracy is strengthened through participation, and ICTs dramatically lower the cost of participation at all levels. Research on shared capitalism demonstrates the value of democracy at work, for workers and organizations.
Participation in collective decision making need not be limited to desultory visits to the voting booth every two to four years. The pervasiveness of ICTs means that citizens could participate in the decisions that affect them in a much more democratic way than we typically do.
Loomio provides a platform for group decision-making that allows people to share information, debate and come to conclusions, encouraging broad and democratic participation. OpaVote allows people to vote online and includes a variety of alternative voting methods for different situations. (You could use it to decide where your team is going to lunch today.) BudgetAllocator enables participatory budgeting for local governments.
As Harvard Law School Professor Yochai Benkler points out, the past few years have greatly expanded the range of ways we can work together collaboratively. Democracy can be part of our daily experience.
This ICT-enabled democratic future is unlikely to come from the corporate world of Silicon Valley, however.
Zuckerbergs own kingdom is one of the most autocratic public companies in the world when it comes to corporate governance. When Facebook went public in 2012, Zuckerberg held a class of stock that allotted him 10 votes per share, giving him an absolute majority of roughly 60 percent of the voting rights. The companys IPO prospectus was clear about what this means:
Mr. Zuckerberg has the ability to control the outcome of matters submitted to our stockholders for approval, including the election of directors and any merger, consolidation, or sale of all or substantially all of our assets.
In other words, Zuckerberg could buy WhatsApp for $19 billion and Oculus a few weeks later for $2 billion (after just a weekend of due diligence). Or, a more troubling scenario, he could legally sell his entire company (and all the data on its 1.86 billion users) to, lets say, a Russian oligarch with ties to President Vladimir Putin, who might use the info for nefarious purposes. While these actions technically require board approval, directors are beholden to the shareholder(s) who elect them that is, in this case, Zuckerberg.
It is not just Facebook that has this autocratic voting structure. Googles founders also have dominant voting control, as do leaders in countless tech firms that have gone public since 2010, including Zillow, Groupon, Zynga, GoPro, Tableau, Box and LinkedIn (before its acquisition by Microsoft).
Most recently, Snaps public offering on March 2 took this trend to its logical conclusion, giving new shareholders no voting rights at all.
We place a lot of trust in our online platforms, sharing intimate personal information that we imagine will be kept private. Yet after Facebook acquired WhatsApp, which was beloved for its rigorous protection of user privacy, many were dismayed to discover that some of their personal data would be shared across the Facebook family of companies unless they actively chose to opt out.
For its part, Facebook has made over 60 acquisitions and, along with Google, controls eight of the 10 most popular smartphone apps.
The idea that founders know best and need to be protected from too many checks and balances (e.g., by their shareholders) fits a particular cultural narrative that is popular in Silicon Valley. We might call it the strongman theory of corporate governance.
Perhaps Zuckerberg is the Lee Kuan Yew of the web, a benevolent autocrat with our best interests at heart. Yew became the founding father of modern-day Singapore after turning it from a poor British outpost into one of the wealthiest countries in the world in a few decades.
But that may not be the best qualification for ensuring democracy for users.
ICTs offer the promise of greater democracy on a day-to-day level. But private for-profit companies are unlikely to be the ones to help build it. Silicon Valleys elites run some of the least democratic institutions in contemporary capitalism. It is hard to imagine that they would provide us with neutral tools for self-governance.
The scholar and activist Audre Lorde famously said that the masters tools will never dismantle the masters house. By the same token, I doubt nondemocratic corporations will provide the tools to build a more vibrant democracy. For that, we might look to organizations that are themselves democratic.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
See the original post:
Can Silicon Valley's Autocrats Save Democracy? - Honolulu Civil Beat
- In sweeping attack on elections, Trump fires leadership of key federal voting assistance commission - Democracy Docket - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- What the World Cup Teaches Us About Democracy: Finding Unity Across Differences in the Classroom - The Fulcrum - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Democracy works best when everyone is heard; homeless situation; no point in voting (Letters) - Daily Camera - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Trump DOJ to target Democratic strongholds for election monitoring: The more eyes on elections the better - Democracy Docket - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Trump DOJ threatens election officials with criminal prosecution over noncitizen voting - Democracy Docket - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Democracy | Proof Through the Night: Driving America and Scaling Walls on America 250 - Mississippi Free Press - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Trump fired the entire Election Administration Commission. Now what? - Democracy Docket - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Federal judges take a bus tour to spread the message of democracy to communities - USA Today - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Its threats, its intimidation: Nevada secretary of state slams Trump DOJ letters targeting election officials over noncitizen voting - Democracy... - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- This Week in Democracy Week 77: ICE Kills Again, White Supremacists Descend on DC, and Trump Wants Birthright Citizenship Case Reheard - Zeteo - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Letter to the Editor | Chuck Putney: The beacon of democracy - Bennington Banner - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- The Supreme Court Is Imposing a New Kind of Democracy. Its a Scam. - Slate Magazine - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- The Supreme Courts Continuing Role in Undermining American Democracy: The 20252026 Term in Review - Center for American Progress - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Democracy has a participation problem. AI may help solve it. - FIRE | Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Too Many Pro-Democracy Groups Are Weakening the Cause - Yale Insights - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Recording of the webinar with Stephan Lewandowsky: Is the Internet compatible with democracy? - EDMO.eu - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Envisioning Federal Scientific Integrity As a Tool to Protect Democracy and Fight Corruption - | Knight First Amendment Institute - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Democracy Is the Unfinished Work - Ford Foundation - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Trump is a danger to US democracy. But the resistance is working | Kenneth Roth - The Guardian - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- UC Berkeley will launch new Nancy Pelosi Institute focused on strengthening democracy - University of California, Berkeley - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Flowers: Of democracy, independence and birthright citizensh... - seMissourian - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Historian reflects on 250 years of American democracy, political crisis and reinvention - WBUR - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- U.S. democracy wasnt inevitable neither is 250 more years - The Japan Times - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Tech, Power, and the Struggle for American Democracy - Tech Policy Press - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Iran Fires on Two Ships in Strait of Hormuz as Trump Threatens to Finish the Job - Democracy Now! - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Venezuelans apply the social media savvy that pushed democracy in 2024 to a disaster in 2026 - WLRN - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Langston Hughes Saw Democracy As Something We Owe One Another - Forbes - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- 1776 Against 1787: Constituent Power and the Forgotten Meaning of American Democracy - Pressenza - International Press Agency - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Democracy under assault from significant third parties at 2025 federal election, parliamentary inquiry finds - The Guardian - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Between the Vote and the Street: Rethinking Democracy in East Africa - Kettering Foundation - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- The Ranked Ballot Is the Pro-Women, Pro-Voter, Pro-Democracy Reform America Needs - Ms. Magazine - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Experiencing Democracy in the Classroom - Education Next - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- 250 years in, ASU experts weigh in on evolving democracy in America - ASU News - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Americas 250th anniversary is also a test for Western democracy - Decode39 - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Opinion: 250th anniversary a time to celebrate the sacred messiness of democracy - ASU News - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- The Founders Never Meant the US to Be a Democracy - Jacobin - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- African Union's Role in Elections: Promoting Democracy or Whitewashing Illegitimacy? - Amani Africa - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Nancy Pelosi Is the Wrong Namesake for Berkeley's 'Institute for Representative Democracy' - Reason Magazine - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Venezuelas interim regime is using the earthquakes to bury democracy - The Hill - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Democracy is alive and well on the Upper West Side: Voters in Morningside Heights cast their votes on Election Day - Columbia Daily Spectator - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Defenders of Democracy: The Thin Blue Line - THIRTEEN - New York Public Media - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Trojan trap of the National Endowment for Democracy: unmasking its hypocrisy - Global Times - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Legislation to Freeze the Arrest of Haredi Draft Evaders - The Israel Democracy Institute - July 1st, 2026 [July 1st, 2026]
- Drake University Appoints Jessica Vanden Berg as Executive Director of the Olson Institute for Public Democracy - Drake University Newsroom - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Sing Democracy 250: A Musical Reflection on Americas History and a Call to Citizenship - Kettering Foundation - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- The Floor Was Always Ours: Ballroom, Belonging, and the Democracy We Built Before They Let Us In - Nonprofit Quarterly - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Congress Directs Trump to End U.S. War on Iran - Democracy Now! - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- In big win for voters, court permanently blocks key parts of Trumps first anti-voting executive order - Democracy Docket - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Second Nature: Elliot Page on New Film Exploring Animal World Beyond the Binary - Democracy Now! - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Food AND Medicine Members Went to Workers Revive Democracy Jobs with Justice National Conference - Maine AFL-CIO - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Ousted Dan Goldman warns antisemitism will be undoing of our democracy - Jewish Insider - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- LAZARRE: Who Is Pro-Democracy Content Actually Reaching? - The Washington Informer - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Remembering Ahmed Wishah, the Latest Palestinian Journalist Killed by Israel in Gaza - Democracy Now! - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Trump weaponized the government against American democracy: Dem blasts GOP for spooking voters - MS NOW - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- The people in this room are the backbone of our democracy. 67 complete state elections training. - Rhode Island Current - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Tang Wing for American Democracy Opens on Eve of USA's 250th - World-Architects - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Ben Wikler: My state was a democracy desert. This is how we turned it around. - WisPolitics - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Democracy, the Military, and Americas Future: A Conversation with Admiral McRaven - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Shared Stewardship: How We Build a Thriving Democracy Together - The Fulcrum - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Letters to the Editor: Preserve a healthy Cubberley, protect democracy, support housing near transit - Palo Alto Online - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- At Atlanta church, Ossoff casts Senate race as test of faith, character and democracy: "Georgia's spirit of tolerance will overwhelm and defeat... - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Walt Whitman Saw New York as Key to the Future of Democracy in his Publications Celebrating Americas Centennial. What Would He Make of the US at 250?... - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- What the Knicks and a White House UFC Spectacles Reveal About Ritual and Power in Today's American Democracy - ZME Science - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- For Imre Huss, Fixing Democracy Starts With Talking to a Stranger - The Fulcrum - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Why Somaliland needs democracy more than ever? - The Times of Israel - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Threats to UK democracy: Disinformation, foreign interference and declining public trust - House of Lords Library - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- On the Necessity of a Political Parties Law as a Prelude to Democracy in Syria - The Syrian Observer - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Video: The Democracy of The Dive Bar - The New York Times - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Top Grants, Fellowships and Research Opportunities for Democracy and Governance - fundsforNGOs - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- First-Time Voters Ahead of the 26th Knesset Elections - The Israel Democracy Institute - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Opinion: IRIS, ACLU and LWV unite in Connecticut to shield democracy - CT Insider - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- UKs tech strategy failure is a threat to democracy, experts - Computing UK - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Procedural Justice Sustaining Sports and Democracy - - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- GUEST VIEWPOINT: There is no democracy without journalism - dailyrecordnews.com - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- The era of trillionaires will be dire for democracy. Here is how we can fight back | Gabriel Zucman - The Guardian - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Georgia Republicans backtracked on gerrymandering because they feared a showdown over Black voting rights - Democracy Docket - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Europes fractured politics and what they reveal about democracy - Brookings - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Two Declarations, One Democracy: On Freedom, Exclusion, and the American Project - Nonprofit Quarterly - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Democracy needs more than just opinions - EBU - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]
- Defending Democracy in the 2026 Midterms: What Public Health Needs to Know - American Public Health Association - June 17th, 2026 [June 17th, 2026]