Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg has invited conservative leaders to a meeting this week to discuss allegations that the social network has been suppressing some political views.
A Facebook spokeswoman told AFP Zuckerberg would meet with about a dozen conservatives including political commentator Glenn Beck and talk show host Dana Perino.
The meeting comes in the wake of a report by tech news website Gizmodo alleging that articles from politically conservative outlets were deliberately omitted from Facebook's "trending" news stories.
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"If we find anything against our principles, you have my commitment that we will take additional steps to address it," Zuckerberg wrote in a Facebook post last week.
Beck said in a post on Facebook that he had been contacted by Zuckerberg and asked to meet Wednesday at Facebook's headquarters in Menlo Park, California.
"Mark wanted to meet with 8 or ten of us to explain what happened and assure us that it won't happen again," Beck wrote.
"The question that needs to be answered Wednesday is: Will Mark see this as an opportunity to free all points of view but at the same time unify America and the world."
Others invited include Zac Moffatt, a political consultant who worked for former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney; Arthur Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute; and Barry Bennett, an advisor to presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.
The debate comes with Facebook and other social networks playing a growing role in how people get their news and amid concern over whether this information is promoted or filtered by online services and applications.