Mark Zuckerberg Says There's No Quick Fix for Facebook's Issues

For all of Facebook’s efforts to stop election interference and other attempts to manipulate users, the battle will wage on indefinitely, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said during a press conference call this afternoon.

“You never fully solve security. It’s an arms race,” Zuckerberg said. “I’m confident that we’re making progress against these adversaries, but they’re very sophisticated.”

Today’s call followed news that Zuckerberg will testify before U.S. Congress on April 11, along with the publication of two Facebook blog posts that enumerated new ways in which Facebook will make its terms and data policy clearer and an update on its plans to restrict data access.

Zuckerberg explained that, on the issue of Russian election interference, Facebook didn’t think ahead to predict the tactics that the Russian government employed. They expected traditional methods, such as phishing, but the misinformation campaign that the Internet Research Agency (IRA) executed was far beyond what the company imagined.

Given all of the issues Facebook is answering for today, from the Cambridge Analytica data breach scandal and other privacy issues related to third-party developer access to election interference and the spread of fake news on the platform, the road ahead will be long, Zuckerberg explained.

“I wish that I could snap my fingers and in three months, or six months, have solved all of these issues,” Zuckerberg said, noting that the platform is far to complex for an expectation of a resolution any time soon. It will be a “multi-year effort, but that doesn’t mean it’s not going to get better every month.” He said he hopes Facebook is currently one year into a “massive three-year push” to resolve the issues that plague the platform.

During the call, Zuckerberg repeated many of the points he’s made over the past couple of weeks, since news of the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke: Facebook should have done more up front to predict and thwart misuse by taking responsibility for the way the tools it created could be used, rather than just putting them out in the world and trusting that users would have good intentions.

“That was a huge mistake,” Zuckerberg said. “It was my mistake.”

A Facebook post Zuckerberg posted on March 21, and subsequent interviews he did with news outlets, echoed his personal responsibility. On…