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Jack Dorsey Tells Rep. Larry Bucshon He Wants to Move Twitter ‘Out of San Francisco’


During his hearing before the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Wednesday, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey claimed he wanted to move the company “out of San Francisco” to create more ideological diversity, and added that the company is considering making the social network’s algorithms public to enable more transparency.

After Rep. Larry Bucshon (R-IN) asked, “Are your algorithms publicly available for independent coders to assess whether there is bias, whether it’s intended or unintended?” Dorsey replied, “Not today, but that is an area we are looking at and we’d love to be more open as a company, including our algorithms and how they work.”

“We don’t yet know the best way to do that. We also have to consider in some cases when we are more clear about how our algorithms work, it allows for gaming of the system, so people taking advantage of it,” claimed Dorsey. “So we need to be cognizant of that, and it’s not a blocker by any means, we’d love for it to be open, but that’s a big understanding that we need to understand how to correct.”

Bucshon also asked Dorsey how Twitter hires its employees and ensures a level of ideological diversity at the company.

“Obviously the tech industry has had some criticism about its level of diversity, but I think it would be important to kind of get your feel for if you’re gonna avoid group-think when you’re creating algorithms, how do you recruit?” asked Bucshon. “I mean, you’re not gonna ask somebody, ‘Hey are you pro-Trump or against Trump,’ I get it, but I’d argue you wanna have people from different races, men, women, different political views… Can you give me a sense of how you build a team?”

Dorsey replied that he wants to move Twitter “out of San Francisco” and more evenly distributed around the United States and the world.“Yeah, this is an active conversation within the company right now. We recognize that we need to decentralize our workforce out of San Francisco. Not everyone wants to be in San Francisco, and not everyone wants to work in San Francisco, and not everyone can even come close to afford living in San Francisco, and it’s something that’s not fair, so we’re considering ways of how we hire more broadly across every geography across this country and also around the world,” he expressed. “It’s finally the case that technology is enabling more of that and we’re really excited about this, and I’m personally excited to not consider San Francisco to be the headquarters but to be a more distributed company.”

Charlie Nash
Breitbart