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Steve Ballmer: the tech billionaire asking if voters in the US election want ‘just the facts’

Former Microsoft boss seeks to build better democracy with data

Elon Musk has used his ownership of X to promote Donald Trump’s re-election as “the only way to save democracy”. Jeff Bezos’s commitment to The Washington Post’s “Democracy Dies in Darkness” motto is in question after he stopped his paper from endorsing a presidential candidate. And the role Mark Zuckerberg’s social media platforms play in spreading political misinformation remains a topic for furious argument

Five spots below them on Bloomberg’s list of the world’s richest people, a lower-profile tech billionaire finds himself similarly preoccupied by politics.

Steve Ballmer, who succeeded Bill Gates and preceded Satya Nadella at Microsoft’s helm, has made it his mission to build a better democracy with data. Ahead of next Tuesday’s US election, he has been trying to turn USAFacts, a not-for-profit civic initiative, into a source of dispassionate statistics to inform the country’s enraged debates.

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