Facebook said it will open three new centres in
Europe to train people in digital skills and committed to training one million
people over the next two years, part of the social media company's drive to
show its contribution to the EU trade bloc.
The US company – which has faced regulatory
pressure in Europe over many issues ranging from privacy to antitrust – said it
would open three "community skills hubs" in Spain, Poland and Italy
as well as investing €10 million (Dh44.9m) in France through its artificial
intelligence research facility.
“People are worried that the digital revolution
is leaving people behind, and we want to make sure that we’re investing in
digital skills to get people the skills they need to fully participate in the
digital economy,” Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, told.
The community hubs will offer training in
digital skills, media literacy and online safety to groups with limited access
to technology, including older people, the young and refugees.
Facebook also committed to having trained one
million people and business owners by 2020. “Absolutely we want to make sure
that people see that we are investing locally, we're investing in technology,
we’re investing in humans,” Ms Sandberg said.
Facebook’s move comes as EU states discuss proposals
to raise the tax bill of technology multinationals after pressure from large
states that accuse companies such as Amazon, Google, Apple and Facebook of
slashing their tax bills by re-routing their EU profits to low-tax countries
such as Luxembourg and Ireland.
Smaller EU countries, such as Luxembourg or
Malta, argue that a solo EU move on corporate tax reform would damage its
economy and favour competitors.European Union states could have lost €5.4
billion in tax revenues from Google and Facebook between 2013 and 2015,
according to a report by an EU politician
last year.
Facebook executives are fanning out across
Europe this week to address the social media company’s slow response to abuses
on its platform, seeking to avoid further legislation along the lines of a new
hate speech law in Germany it claims goes too far.
Through its Community Boost EU programme,
Facebook will work with small businesses and start-ups to help them grow and
create jobs.It said it would conduct in-person training for 100,000 small- and
medium-sized businesses by 2020 and online training for 250,000 businesses.“What
we’re finding is when small businesses use technology
when small businesses use Facebook, they hire,” Ms Sandberg said.
The European Union’s executive has stressed the
need to boost Europeans’ digital skills to help bring down unemployment and
enable Europe to create its own digital multinational company.Facebook has
opened similar centres in countries such as Nigeria and Brazil.
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