It makes more sense when it is acknowledged that "Foreign Policy" is the official magazine of the Council on Foreign Relations, a group of people who are used to running the world.
The CFR's main concern is that Facebook allows non-traditional actors, mainly not them or organizations which they do not have control over, to have some influence on the narrative that explains world events to the public at large in each particular country. They consider this an undesirable state of affairs. Thus, Facebook should, in their opinion, work to alter its policies to maintain and even amplify the dominance with regards to narrative setting that the traditional media has given to the traditional narrative authors, which are composed of CFR members and their proxies.
> It makes more sense when it is acknowledged that "Foreign Policy" is the official magazine of the Council on Foreign Relations, a group of people who are used to running the world.
The CFR's main concern is that Facebook allows non-traditional actors, mainly not them or organizations which they do not have control over, to have some influence on the narrative that explains world events to the public at large in each particular country. They consider this an undesirable state of affairs. Thus, Facebook should, in their opinion, work to alter its policies to maintain and even amplify the dominance with regards to narrative setting that the traditional media has given to the traditional narrative authors, which are composed of CFR members and their proxies.