I guess I'm a little surprised that you think that the threat is foreign when what we've seen time and time again with the 17 countries we dealt with—the domestic threat of the genocide in Myanmar where Facebook was warned again and again about the extremist language against the Rohingya Muslims.
It did nothing about it; ignored it; has been condemned internationally; still it has not really taken steps.
In Sri Lanka, we heard the same thing. In Brazil; we had representatives from Brazil at the international committee warning us. In Nigeria, the ability to use those platforms to spread hate was not foreign; it was domestic. In each case, Facebook failed to respond.
For the 2019 election, we're gearing up to fight a Cold War when what we really need to know is how to deal with third party actors who want to influence elections—100 votes here, blaming people there, attacking immigrants over here and doing it very effectively through the manipulation of the algorithms to the Facebook platform. That's the question that we want to be reassured on, and I'm not hearing that.