Trump warns Google, Facebook and Twitter in row over bias
US President
Donald Trump has warned Google, Twitter and Facebook they are "treading on
troubled territory" amid a row over perceived bias.
He said they
had to be "very careful", after earlier accusing Google of rigging
the search results for the phrase "Trump news".
An aide said
the administration was "looking into" the issue of regulation.
Google said
its search engine set no political agenda and was not biased towards any
political ideology.
Speaking to
reporters at the White House, Mr Trump said Google had "really taken a lot
of advantage of a lot of people, it's a very serious thing".
Adding the
names of Facebook and Twitter, he said: "They better be careful, because
you can't do that to people... we have literally thousands of complaints coming
in."
He gave no
details of what action he might take.
However,
when asked earlier about Google, Mr Trump's top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow,
said the administration was "taking a look" at whether it should be
regulated and would do "some investigation and some analysis".
'Suppressed'
Analysts say
there is little to back up Mr Trump's claim and that it is unclear how he could
take action.
Some said
attempts to alter search engine results could violate the First Amendment,
although his administration could make it difficult for Google by looking into
its dominance of the market.
In an
earlier tweet, Mr Trump accused Google of prioritising negative news stories
from what he described as the "national left-wing media".
He said most
of the stories that appeared on the results page were negative and that
conservative reporting was being "suppressed".
Last week he
said social media were "totally discriminating against
Republican/Conservative voices" and that he would "not let that
happen".
Google
denied using political viewpoints to shape its search results.
It said:
"Search is not used to set a political agenda and we don't bias our
results toward any political ideology.
"We
continually work to improve Google search and we never rank search results to
manipulate political sentiment."
Mercedes
Bunz, a senior lecturer in digital technology at King's College London, told the
Media it was highly unlikely that Google was deliberately ranking news
according to political bias.
"Google's
news algorithm is optimised for actuality and proximity of an event but it is
generally not optimised to look for political orientation," she said.
"However,
it has a tendency to rank web pages higher that a lot of people link to.
"For
news, this does not seem to have changed with Google's last update of its
search algorithm, which was rolled out on 1 August."
Twitter and
Facebook have not commented directly.
In his
tweets, President Trump claimed that 96% of the news articles presented by
Google in response to the phrase "Trump news" were from left-wing
news outlets.
He did not
name the source of this figure - but The Verge website reports it appears to
have come from analysis by Paula Bolyard at the conservative news site PJ
Media.
Ms Bolyard
reported the 96% figure and said CNN had the greatest number of featured links,
which President Trump mentioned as well.
"I
performed the search multiple times using different computers - registered to
different users - and Google returned similar results," she wrote.
"While
not scientific, the results suggest a pattern of bias against right-leaning
content."
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