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From    Hi all, it's Eric. Reading Robert Mueller’s report, it’s hard not to feel li

[Bloomberg] [Fully Charged]( From [Bloomberg](   [FOLLOW US [Facebook Share]]( [Twitter Share]( [SUBSCRIBE [Subscribe]](  Hi all, it's Eric. Reading Robert Mueller’s report, it’s hard not to feel like that frog who gets [slowly boiled alive](. Many of its most incendiary allegations had already been published elsewhere. We knew most of it, but now we really know: President Donald Trump really did order the White House counsel to have Mueller fired. Trump really was working on a Trump Tower Moscow project through at least June 2016. A Russian lawyer really met with campaign officials, including Jared Kushner and Donald Trump Jr., after promising an intermediary to deliver "official documents and information that would incriminate Hillary." Others will weigh in on what it all means for the Trump presidency. As a technology reporter reading the report, I realized that I was partially submerged in another pot of boiling water. Several pages of the findings remind us that U.S. social media companies played an essential role in the Russian interference operation during the 2016 election. Mueller’s report is unambiguous about that fact. On page four it says, “The Internet Research Agency (IRA) carried out the earliest Russian interference operations identified by the investigation—a social media campaign designed to provoke and amplify political and social discord in the United States.” The report says that interference began in 2014 and then evolved into an effort to support then-candidate Trump by early 2016. Facebook Inc. said that as many as 126 million people may have been touched by IRA. And Twitter Inc. alerted 1.4 million people that it believed had interacted with an IRA account, the report says. Facebook is mentioned 81 times. Twitter gets 71 mentions. Kudos to Google which only gets six mentions—mostly in the context of Trump administration officials naively googling people. For example: “After receiving Papadopoulos's name from [campaign official Joy] Lutes, [campaign co-chairman Sam] Clovis performed a Google search on Papadopoulos, learned that he had worked at the Hudson Institute, and believed that he had credibility on energy issues.” Very thorough. In all seriousness, the broader findings raise a question that’s every bit as serious as the search for proof of collusion: Are U.S. social media companies prepared for the next election? Facebook and Twitter have so far focused their preparation efforts on banning accounts, and deleting groups controlled by Russian agents. But that seems to be sort of a whack-a-mole approach, knocking out bad actors only after they’ve made an impact. This seems like a time when we should be asking more fundamental questions about how Facebook and Twitter operate. And one central issue is that online, people often aren’t who they say they are—and as a result, act with impunity. In some ways, that’s liberating. Anonymity allows people who might otherwise be repressed or fearful to express their ideas. It’s one of the wonders of the internet. But it also enables people, Russian or not, to act in all sorts of disingenuous ways. As a reporter interacting with trolls online, it can be frustrating to face accounts without any discernible identity. For instance, I’d love to know whether people who Tweet on $TSLA and $TSLAQ are long or short the electric car company—and whether they're earnest observers or users spinning their own mini-propaganda machines for their respective bets. While that’s a silly example, there are far more terrifying ones. Countries like Venezuela, Iran and Bangladesh have all tried their hands at their own [social media disinformation campaigns.]( And neo-[Nazis have taken to impersonating Jews]( and other minorities online. The push and pull over online identity comes back to the central question of free speech online. But the alternative to anonymity isn’t necessarily some central government-accessible database like [we’re seeing in China](. It’s possible to imagine, for example, a sort of scaled-up version of verified Tweets. Social media companies could give people who prove that they run their Twitter account a bigger audience or more power to appear in replies. Twitter could even reward people who don’t publish their name publicly, but are willing to prove that they live in the country they say they do. This isn’t a fully baked plan, of course, and there are plenty of tradeoffs to be weighed. But the Mueller report should be a reminder that the status quo is not working, and probably won’t be before votes are cast 2020. After all these years one central tenant of the internet has held true, proving far more insidious than it once appeared: “On the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” Maybe they should. —[Eric Newcomer](mailto:enewcomer@bloomberg.net)  And here’s what you need to know in global technology news  Maybe we shouldn't count on Facebook to fix much of anything. [The company decided to announce]( that actually it had stored millions—not tens of thousands—of unencrypted Instagram passwords, right as the world was poring over the Mueller report. Facebook also announced that it had "unintentionally" scooped up the email contacts of [1.5 million users without consent](.  Zoom and Pinterest both started trading on a good note. Pinterest shares [climbed more than 30 percent]( on their first day as a public company. Also noteworthy: Zoom's CEO was refused a visa eight times. [Now he's a billionaire](.  Amazon and Google called a truce. [Finally your Fire TV]( will be able to play YouTube and your Chromecast will play Amazon Prime Video. If you needed your weekly reminder that your creature comforts hang on petty conflicts between a handful of technology billionaires, there it is.  Join Bloomberg's flagship tech event, Sooner Than You Think 2019, on June 11 to 12 in London. Learn and be inspired by the world's most influential tech leaders. View the website [here](, and apply to attend.   Sponsored Content by MongoDB Application Modernization Factory Organizations are under pressure to be better, faster, or cheaper than the competition – but companies encumbered with legacy systems can find it impossible to stay relevant with more nimble opposition. MongoDB is helping thousands of organizations to free themselves from legacy systems. [Learn how](.   You received this message because you are subscribed to the Bloomberg Technology newsletter Fully Charged. You can tell your friends to [sign up here](.  [Unsubscribe]( | [Bloomberg.com]( | [Contact Us]( Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022

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