Ex-Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya told CNBC on Tuesday that social media is creating a society that confuses “popularity” with “truth.”
“The tools that we have created today are starting to erode the social fabric of how society works,” he said in a “Squawk Box” interview, in response to comments he made that went viral.
At a recent Stanford Graduate School of Business event, Palihapitiya said social media is tearing society apart.
On CNBC, he explained what he meant. “Today we live in a world now where it is easy to confuse truth and popularity. And you can use money to amplify whatever you believe, and get people to believe what is popular is now truthful. And what is not popular may not be truthful.”
“The reality is, I can take money and I can use that through all the social media systems that exist to hundreds of millions of people,” said Palihapitiya, founder and CEO venture capital powerhouse Social Capital, which has $2.6 billion in assets under management.
“We can do that about vaccines, we can do that about gay rights, we can do that about bathroom laws, we can do that about Roy Moore,” he said, referring to Moore, under a cloud of sexual assault allegations involving teens, as he battles Democrat Doug Jones in Tuesday’s special election to fill Alabama’s vacant U.S. Senate seat.
Palihapitiya said the question people have to ask is “how do we live in a world where that is now possible?”
He said what social media does is “exploit our own natural tendencies in human beings to get and want feedback.”
“That feedback, chemically speaking, is the release of dopamine in your brain,” Palihapitiya said. The “feedback loops,” get people to react, he added.
“I think if you get to desensitized and you need it over and over and over again, then you become actually detached from the world in which you live,” he said.
Ex-Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya: Social media is creating a society that confuses 'truth and popularity'