I was allowed to visit Facebook's election centre in Dublin with
@TBspekschoor. That's where they monitor manipulation of the EU elections. Together with eight other broadcasters and 18 online/print media, we were allowed to take a look. It turned out to be a strange visit.
In almost a decade (!) of tech journalism, I've reported on quite a few PR events. Think Apple keynotes. But I've never seen something as tightly controlled as this.
To me a "visit" means: being allowed to walk freely, talk to people, get a sense of what they're doing. This event, compared to a visit, was like a drive-by shooting compared to a good conversation. After barely 20 minutes (!) our time was up.
A few shots and an interview shorter than my career as a florist (I was not very good at cutting flowers) and that was it.
It's very limiting for your journalistic freedom of movement when your host dictates whom you can talk to in which location, and from which angle you're "allowed" to film. The next step will be Facebook themselves supplying the footage and interviews.
Here is our story about this visit and the measures Facebook is taking against fake news and other forms of electoral influencing: [link to the article]
Now I'm forgetting to mention
@Hoguhugo, who managed to deliver an 8 o'clock news-worthy item despite Facebook's control-freakery. Coming up soon on NPO1.