KEY POINTS
  • Early Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya said the social media giant has failed to regulate its product despite the ongoing misinformation and threats that have thrived on its pages over the past few years.
  • False information that started on dark corners of the internet made its way to social media and to conservative news outlets, and then were falsely repeated by President Donald Trump, creating a loop that sustained conspiracy theories.
  • Social media companies, including Facebook and Twitter, have been called out by critics for failing to police their content, which some say helped contribute to Wednesday's riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Early Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya called out the social media giant for failing to regulate its product despite the ongoing misinformation and threats that have thrived on its pages over the past few years.

"What I'm thinking to myself is that if I was working at Facebook today, I would be confused, and largely because I would wonder what changed from six months ago, one year ago, 24 months ago and today," the founder and CEO of investment firm Social Capital said Thursday on CNBC's "Halftime Report." "The disinformation was the same, the amount of vitriol that flowed through some of the groups was the same. Their ability to organize was the same. Storm the Capitol existed before they actually stormed the capitol."