wisty 10 hours ago

> A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism

Has anyone ever seen Facebbok as idealistic? As far as I can tell, they've always been basically Amazon (the borg that will win at all costs) but a little more trivial, cool and Web2.0, they were never the "don't be evil" Google, the idealistic Twitter, I can't think of many less ideal driven companies.

Facebook beat MySpace IMO because it tricked people into using real names. It had the best network effect because of its real name policy (you could easily find people you knew), but it didn't tell you about it, it just posted your name from the sign-up page, which was kind of a dark pattern at the time.

Facebook also had a tool that would let you give them your username and password for other sites, and would scrape contacts for you. But don't try scraping your own contacts out of Facebook, that's wrong.

Remember the apps, like zombie games? Facebook was not kind to 3rd party devs.

Facebook has always been ruthless and other than a bit of open source (PyTorch and React are nice, I guess) as far as I can tell it's never really had any mission other than getting big.

  • frereubu 9 hours ago

    The idealism is the current corporate story - "enabling communication" etc. - but you're right that there was no idealism to start with. Zuckerberg set up The Facebook so undergrads at Harvard could rate how hot girls were, scraping their images from unprotected university servers.

    This is a great podcast centred around the film about it - The Social Network - but it delves really interestingly into the story and motivations of the early years: https://www.ppfideas.com/episodes/the-great-political-films%...

    The main conclusion is that Zuckerberg is a pure, amoral opportunist, which is why Facebook has been so successful through an era of "ask for forgiveness, not permission".

  • netsharc 8 hours ago

    > Facebook also had a tool that would let you give them your username and password for other sites, and would scrape contacts for you.

    I remember FB recommending me a contact, I thought "Why does that distinctive name sound familar?". I looked through my e-mails and I had sent a few emails back and forth with the person because of an eBay transaction.

    I know I never told FB to scrape my email account, but I'm guessing this person did. And it's certainly not even the address book, but the email addresses from people's inboxes (and why not the names from the "From" field as well. If I was tasked with this I'd even suggest scraping any signature fields).

    Hey, at least it bought Zuck a $900K watch.

    • psadauskas 4 hours ago

      Several years ago (~2016), I was working on writing a facebook integration for the company I was working for at the time. I'd deleted my personal facebook account years before that, so I created a new facebook profile to test with. I faked all the information (My actual first name, but the company I worked at for last name, used my company email, made up a birthdate, etc.) I was using a different computer than I'd ever logged in to facebook before, and I was on the company network.

      On the first page after signing up, it wanted me to "Add some Friends", and suggested a bunch of people I knew. Including my cousin with a different last name, and who lived several states away.

      I've always been fairly privacy conscious, always using an adblocker, but that was downright creepy.

    • alterom 7 hours ago

      Facebook is routinely suggesting me contacts that I have met and interacted with offline, the only link to them being an entry in my phone book.

      Which, I'm guessing, I allowed Messenger to have access to at some point.

      Other than that, it's inference from GPS/location data, which Meta, as far as I know, didn't deny doing.

      • natebc 5 hours ago

        Could also be coming from the other side of that contact interaction.

      • Cwizard 6 hours ago

        Were you ever connected to the same Wifi network? You can probably use that for tracking too.

        • netsharc 3 hours ago

          I find it "amusing" that FB (or well, a lot of phone apps) can see how your relationship with people ebb and flow.

          E.g. for a dating situation: new WhatsApp contact, growing frequency of texts, growing frequency of WhatsApp calls, culminating in a night where both phones were connected to the same SSID / locatable in one geo-location throughout the whole night, without their users checking them.

          When that happens it'd be time to show them ads with the text "Your new love interest is highly interested in these products"...

          It'd also be "amusing" to big-data the whole thing and get the computer to spit out the answer to the question "Where is this relationship going?"

        • ethbr1 5 hours ago

          It definitely uses connection IPs as some heuristic.

          I exclusively used Facebook for family (years ago before deleting it) and received recommendations of otherwise socially-unconnected roommates who habitually accessed FB through house wifi.

    • dspillett 6 hours ago

      I don't think that they'd go as far as scanning mailboxes, the return on the effort doesn't seem worth it. More likely the person you were connected to added you to an address book (or perhaps their mailer added you automatically) as someone they have dealt with before. Some anti-spam measures use a source address existing in a connected addressbook as a whitelisting clue.

    • daralthus 7 hours ago

      To be fair, it's more likely they just looked you up on FB.

  • conartist6 6 hours ago

    I'll bite. When I worked there I didn't see the management as idealistic, but the news media vis a vis the employee base had a lot of power. Many times I saw fiery journalism create direct confrontations between Zuck and ordinary employees about things like the company's moderation reaction to the shocking "napalm girl" wartime photo. Back then employees often won, creating shifts on company policy that felt like would not have happened otherwise. At some point it seems that the company decided that it wanted its people to have less of that kind of power though, presumably because it created a liberal company and Zuck seems to see the idea of Facebook as a liberal entity as a serious threat to his company

  • KaiserPro 7 hours ago

    > Facebook beat MySpace IMO because it tricked people into using real names

    No, FB was a much better product, it was far more connected, any way easier to talk and make friends online. It also was a lot more reliable.

    > Facebook was not kind to 3rd party devs.

    Indeed, they were not kind, mainly because they realised, way too late, that the API they had designed gave third parties way too much access to the "social graph". (see Cambridge analytica, although actually its much more smoke and mirrors than you might imagine)

    They needed to cut down that access because 1) they'd been told to 2) they realised that people could extract that data for free, thus denting their analytics advantage that made advertising so lucrative.

    • firefax 5 hours ago

      >FB was a much better product

      FB used to have granular privacy controls and no "feed" -- you wrote on someone's wall, they wrote on yours, and people had to actively click on your profile to see the messages rather than have them thrust front and center.

      FB abandoned that commitment to privacy and has suffered as a result.

      • sidewndr46 4 hours ago

        How has Facebook suffered? Most of their losses seem to be self imposed, stuff like the "metaverse"

  • jkukul 7 hours ago

    > and other than a bit of open source (PyTorch and React are nice, I guess) as far as I can tell it's never really had any mission other than getting big.

    I sometimes wonder what motivations these orgs have in contributing to open source.

    My cynical side refuses to believe that the reasons are altruistic (although I'm sure there are altruistic individuals in those orgs!).

    I think that the decisions to contribute to open source are calculated business decisions made to benefit the organization by:

    * Getting outside contributions to the software that's widely used inside an organization

    * Getting more people familiar with the software so that when they're hired they are already up to speed

    * Attracting talent

    * Improving PR

    * Undermining competition (Llama?)

    Regardless of the reasons, I think that there's a huge net benefit to society from large companies open-sourcing their software. I just don't think that's an argument to view these companies more favorably.

  • Climatebamb 5 hours ago

    Amazon? FB was always a lot more evil.

    Amazon just build the best logistics network on the planet and leverages this for their monopoly.

    FB pushed fake news and everyting else without consideration as long as it grabs your attention which they then sell.

  • Voultapher 9 hours ago

    It was also born by the guy - Zuck and arguably in a similar spirit - who initially created a hot or not webpage to rank female college classmates by "fuckability". No clue how any of this would come as a surprise if you know his history.

    Brian Cantrill talks about how social media was born crocked [1] while referring to the eerily similar friendster backstory.

    [1] https://youtu.be/0wtvQZijPzg?t=482

  • rajman187 9 hours ago

    > other than a bit of open source (PyTorch and React are nice, I guess)

    Not to detract from your main point but I think this misses a lot of contributions, eg Cassandra, Hive, Presto, GraphQL, the plethora of publications coming out of FAIR (fundamental AI research) and of course the Llama family of models which have enabled quite a few developments themselves

    • mschuster91 9 hours ago

      At least with GraphQL I think the world would be better off if it had never seen the light of day. It's a steaming pile of hyper complex dung.

      And for the other projects, their paths are littered with the dead bodies of engineers who had been ordered to chase down one of Facebook's hype technologies just because "Facebook does it so we can follow their best example".

      • jeswin 6 hours ago

        > At least with GraphQL I think the world would be better off if it had never seen the light of day. It's a steaming pile of hyper complex dung.

        Of course not. GraphQL has vastly simplified our backend development, and has also resulted in better coordination between backend and frontend teams. There are so many things which GraphQL gets right - TYPES and schemas, traversing entity relationships, selectively querying fields, builtin API explorer etc. We use REST only for super trivial projects.

        • mschuster91 5 hours ago

          I'm more of an ops person and had the misfortune having to assist an inherited Drupal/static site generator project that heavily used GraphQL. It was not fun to debug this crap, and that is my biggest issue - as if the SSG setup itself isn't already a pain in the ass, adding GraphQL to the build stack was just the icing on the cake.

          (One of the issues the dev team faced was the insane amount of RAM that was consumed by the GraphQL crap in both the FE and BE containers, which was a pain to debug for the FE side because that was an ephemeral container on an EKS environment)

          IMHO, GraphQL entices developers on both ends to just be lazy and throw the complexity to the other team, and Ops who has to support both teams and mediate between both sides who just blame the other side for being too dumb.

    • __loam 9 hours ago

      I think React and GraphQL are pretty impressive in terms of how shitty they've made the developer experience at so many companies. GraphQL especially seems to attract the kind of people who love to misuse technologies built for massive orgs in companies with fewer than 100 employees.

      • pcthrowaway 8 hours ago

        > GraphQL especially seems to attract the kind of people who love to misuse technologies built for massive orgs in companies with fewer than 100 employees.

        This is almost exactly how I feel about Kubernetes

      • signatoremo 5 hours ago

        This is the classic example of the quote:

        There are only two kinds of languages: the ones people complain about and the ones nobody uses

        • __loam 43 minutes ago

          Can we stop pulling this quote out every time someone brings up a legitimate pain point?

      • chillingeffect 6 hours ago

        That explains some of the experiences ive seen at small companies! From my pov it was "design-by-resume." People wanted to play w tech for their next job, with less concern for what the business needed.

      • ajb 8 hours ago

        There's actually a well-known effect in standards, that large orgs want to overcomplicate them, as having implemented a bunch of overcomplicated standards becomes part of their moat against competitors. This is definitely done deliberately; the most blatant example is Office Open XML but it's true of others too. They know that they have the staff to waste effort on it, and others don't.

        I'm not sure anyone is thinking 'lets open source our most dumb ideas to hobble potential competition' - but they would do it if they thought of it.

  • MiddleEndian 6 hours ago

    >the idealistic Twitter

    Never saw Twitter as idealistic. Seems to just want to show you celebrity gossip. Substantially worse product than Facebook from the start, and really pioneered the attempts at trying to continuously grab people's attention as opposed to just being a tool. Not really a defense of Zuck's products as a whole as Instagram seems to be the same.

    >Facebook beat MySpace IMO because it tricked people into using real names

    That was (and is) a fantastic feature, and I remember being aware of it when I signed up. It was super easy to meet people in real life then find them on Facebook, and then invite them to future events in real life or keep track of what they're up to.

    Also Myspace allowing HTML resulted in a bunch of entirely unreadable pages. And the Myspace extended friend network didn't really work because everyone was friends with Myspace Tom (who by all means seems to be a chill guy IRL)

    >Remember the apps, like zombie games? Facebook was not kind to 3rd party devs.

    If anything, Facebook was too friendly to third party devs (which does track with your comparison with Amazon, which I think is far too friendly to third party sellers). Third party apps are anti-features IMO. Should've just stuck to its core functionality, connecting you with people you know, and showing you content from groups that you have chosen to join (which you can still get in your newsfeed if you aggressively block and hide almost everything, which I do lol)

    • criddell 5 hours ago

      > Substantially worse product than Facebook from the start

      I disagree. When Twitter first started taking off at SXSW twenty years ago it had very little in common with Facebook. There wasn't an algorithm, there were no ads, and there was barely a website. You just received text messages from people you followed. You mostly interacted with it via your phone and for many of us, that meant text entry on the digits keys of a Nokia or Motorola phone. It was delightful. You likely personally knew all the people you were tweeting with.

      Facebook was something you did on your computer. There were lots of ads and they had just launched the algorithmic news feed. It was the beginning of something bad IMHO.

      • MiddleEndian 5 hours ago

        I think I got an account in late 2007 or 2008, so perhaps it was different in 2006 or early 2007. But I do remember in 2009, Ashton Kutcher was in the news for having a million followers on Twitter, so the time where it was not for celebrity gossip was certainly brief.

        I also generally prefer not to be notified by things on my phone if I can avoid it, computer use is more deliberate.

        >You likely personally knew all the people you were tweeting with.

        But I certainly knew all the people I was friends with on Facebook, they were people I first met in person, and it had their names.

        I think fundamentally, I dislike the asymmetric nature of "following" people on Twitter (or Instagram or whatever). On Facebook you are friends or you are not. Obviously you can hide/mute people or whatever but the fundamental interaction is mutual.

    • duxup 5 hours ago

      IIRC, early twitter really felt like it was there to provide content you wanted.

      It was different at the start.

      • TeMPOraL 5 hours ago

        Back then, it was always different at the start. This was when digital services were built with the service, not exit, in mind.

        Or maybe it's just me looking at the past through rose-colored glasses? Yet I really feel the rot wasn't always there, it set in over time and eventually encompassed all. Today, I pretty much assume that any new service is an exit-seeking scam until proven otherwise; I don't remember having much reason for that 15 years ago.

    • insane_dreamer 3 hours ago

      > Never saw Twitter as idealistic. Seems to just want to show you celebrity gossip. Substantially worse product ...

      That may have been late stage Twitter, but early stage twitter was _not_ that. It became _the_ (only) way to be able to get near real-time information on some unfolding event, usually by the people actually involved, and very useful in that regard. It facilitated realtime communications in a way that FB did not.

  • latexr 7 hours ago

    > Has anyone ever seen Facebbok as idealistic?

    That’s how Zuckerberg painted it, and no doubt there were people who bought it, at least internally. See the red book.

    https://www.map.cv/blog/redbook

    • ForHackernews 6 hours ago

      >Zuckerberg's Law: The amount each person shares double each year.

      Anecdotally, this is almost certainly false. I (and most people I know) are posting ("sharing") less and less. Faced with a surveillance panopticon, I think many normal people are opting out. Peer-to-peer networks are withering.

      The internet is reverting to the format of traditional media, with two distinct classes of broadcasters ('influencers') and audience members.

      • latexr 5 hours ago

        > Anecdotally, this is almost certainly false.

        That law exists at least since 2008, over a decade and a half ago. It’s plausible it was true and born from observation at the time. The first Snowden documents were published half a decade later, in 2013.

        • ForHackernews 2 hours ago

          Yeah, so a decade-old now-dead trend isn't a "law" or we could be talk about the "Iron Law of jQuery: All sites will expand until they include at least three incompatible versions of jQuery".

    • anal_reactor 7 hours ago

      The number of people who drank the kool-aid is astonishing. To the same tune, I think that if you tell people that politicians lie, majority of them will be deeply shocked, hurt, and offended.

      • gmac 7 hours ago

        > if you tell people that politicians lie

        If you do it as a blanket statement — i.e. all politicians lie all the time — then yes, I will be pretty irritated.

        Some politicians spout dangerous nonsense most of the time.

        Other politicians can be trusted most of the time, and when they lie it tends towards 'spin' or 'being economical with the truth' (such as: "we are spending more on education than ever before" — when this is true in nominal/absolute terms but false in real/per-pupil terms).

        There is a world of difference between these positions, and treating them alike (as many do) undermines democracies.

      • latexr 7 hours ago

        I’m not sure that’s true in general. I see many people do the polar opposite: spout “every politician is the same, they’re all crooks”. Which isn’t helpful either.

        Could be a generational or cultural thing, though.

        • pixl97 6 hours ago

          I mean, you're both probably correct.

          In the US a huge portion of the population doesn't vote, I would expect those that think every politician is a crook.

          The other side that does vote thinks the other politician lies and their politician is the good one.

          • latexr 4 hours ago

            I have no doubt both camps exist, I’m only questioning it’s (to quote above) the majority. That’s why I said I don’t think it’s true in general.

          • rightbyte 5 hours ago

            Many mix up what politicians want to do with what they can do.

      • wvh 5 hours ago

        Lies, to many, are better than being alone in a dark and cold universe. Please tell me my worst fears and psychological hang-ups are not true.

  • duxup 5 hours ago

    Agreed, a lot of companies I can make an argument for believe in many being "idealistic" at some point. (admittedly I'm using "idealistic" as a very wide ranging concept here)

    Not Facebook... if there was some idealism it was way way before I found Facebook.

  • ghaff 5 hours ago

    I more or less agree with a lot of whaat you wrote, but I'd argue for an ostensibly personal social network, real names are mostly a positive.

  • rsynnott 6 hours ago

    > Has anyone ever seen Facebbok as idealistic?

    People who work there often seem to (or at least used to years ago), though I could never really figure out why.

  • guax 9 hours ago

    I remember de people graph search when no privacy settings really existed and people kept complete and updated profiles. It was the ultimate stalker took. Absolute batshit crazy that it existed even for the short time it did.

  • wslh 6 hours ago

    > It had the best network effect because of its real name policy

    I think it was the best network effect because it started as an elite network in US universities and propagated from there.

  • jmyeet 6 hours ago

    Facebook had the same kind of noble mission Google once had. Google's mission was to make information universally accessible. Facebook's was to connect people.

    There are lots of reasons FB beat MySpace. MySpace was really a different product. It was focused on your homepage, really. Facebook was one of the first to introduce an algorithmic feed. I would also disagree that people were "tricked" into using their real names. This greatly helped with discoverability and it's actually what most people want.

    As for Facebook scraping third-party sites... citation needed. I mean this was great for Facebook's advertising business but it's really no different to the DoubleClick (and ultimately Google) pixel, which is to say it's a high-level profile of pages you visit (that have the pixel).

    As for the games, Facebook didn't kill those. Mobile did. And I'm sorry, but nothing will make me feel sorry for Mark Pincus and Zynga [1].

    [1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3218774

isoprophlex 10 hours ago

Good to have more people expose the greedy, dictatorial, detrimental shitshow that is single individuals having an outsized control over important technology. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Noone should be as big as Zuck, Musk, Altman, Bezos...

I had one moment of eyebrow-raising while reading the article. On the risk of blaming someone who was mind controlled into caring too much about ultimately unimportant, spiritually toxic shit:

> Wynn-Williams’ critiques aren’t limited to Zuckerberg. She describes the working culture under Sandberg as so intense that Wynn-Williams felt pressured to send her talking points while in labor, her feet in stirrups.

My thinking is... can you put this 100% on Sandberg? I mean, I get that the culture is bad, but there's two in this game. Maybe... turn off your phone for a day when you're giving birth?!

  • kelnos 10 hours ago

    > My thinking is... can you put this 100% on Sandberg? I mean, I get that the culture is bad, but there's two in this game. Maybe... turn off your phone for a day when you're giving birth?!

    Sure, but you can look at this in one of two ways. One is the way you seem to be angling for, where we have an employee who is so disturbingly eager to please that she continues to do work at absurd times when no one should ever expect to be working. The other way is of an employee who has seen how her boss treats employees, and believes that her position, career, and livelihood would be in jeopardy if she wasn't working even in situations where no one should be expected to be working.

    I think the second take is more likely. And even if we think it's bizarre that someone could get to the point where they believe that kind of devotion to their job is necessary, it's still alarming and raises red flags that a company culture could cause someone to get to the point that they'd feel that way.

    • theK 10 hours ago

      I am inclined to agree with you but I do have a bit of nuance to add. Pretty sure this is not going to be a popular opinion but I think the second POV you present is apt but dependant on hierarchy level as well as each individual's drive to succeed.

      From my understanding that incident happened while she was in a directorial position, not some IC level. At that level one has to constantly actively balance private life and work, no one will do it for you. I am all for supporting employees on all levels (and sure her superior could and should have done some things differently) but if your aspirations and perseverance get you to the point where you are flirting with the C suite, you should also be aware the you own your decisions now.

      • zelphirkalt 9 hours ago

        On the other hand, if you are that far in, that you are "flirting with the C suite", it is almost impossible not to have knowledge about you having joined a data gobbling sect/mafia, that will eat you up alive, if you upset them. So while she should have been aware that she makes her own decisions, she might also have been aware of what happens, if she does.

        • theK 7 hours ago

          > while she should have been aware that she makes her own decisions, she might also have been aware of what happens, if she does.

          I don't understand. In my world view, owning your decisions includes understanding the paths those decisions might lead to and finding your ~piece~peace with that.

          EDIT: s/piece/peace/

          • latexr 7 hours ago

            > EDIT: s/piece/peace/

            This is a minor typo whose real intent was still understandable, you fixed it right away, and no one had replied yet. Adding the fake strike through and edit note makes your post a bit harder and more inconvenient to read with no advantage. You can just edit it in place, there would be no harm to it.

            • coliveira 6 hours ago

              You're completely right. It is an annoyance in this site to see people listing very small edits as if something important was happening.

      • firefax 5 hours ago

        >flirting with the C suite

        It sounds like one of the issues was that the C-Suite flirted with her

        >Wynn-Williams also writes that Kaplan, as her boss, made inappropriate comments to her, including repeatedly asking where she was bleeding from after childbirth. She writes that, shortly after he called her sultry in front of other co-workers, Kaplan ground into her on a dance floor. She triggered an investigation into Kaplan and writes that she was “almost immediately” retaliated against with a cut in duties before eventually being fired. Wynn-Williams describes the investigation as a “farce.”

    • rurp 2 hours ago

      It seems pretty extreme to say that her livelihood was in jeopardy given that her salary was probably an order of magnitude more than an average worker. She likely put up with that and other toxic behavior because she was highly ambitious and wanted to keep making immense amounts of money.

      This doesn't excuse Sandberg at all, I'm sure she would be a horrifically bad person to work for. But when I read that section I immediately thought of highly ambitious people I've worked with who I could see on either side of that encounter. Such people often are highly materially successful, although most of them don't seem very happy about it.

    • stef25 8 hours ago

      If you have a job at Facebook today, you can get an impressive job somewhere else tomorrow. Nobody should be that connected.

    • blitzar 10 hours ago

      If Sandberg was a man it would not have happened.

      Woman-on-Woman violence in the workplace has to stop, instead of trying to constantly take each other down they need to be better allies to other women.

      Especially true for those that aspire to be role models for successful women and write books about how to "Lean In".

      • lynx97 9 hours ago

        I am sorry, but this attitude is sexist. My allies are those I can relate to, those which I can cooperate with. I don't pick my allies based on gender, and nor should you. And you shouldn't coerce anyone into forming alliances based on gender. It is the person that matters, not their gender or race or whatever other random attribute.

        • blitzar 9 hours ago

          Its sexism all the way down - Sandberg would not have done that to a male subordinate (who's wife was giving birth) and a male boss would not have done that to Wynn-Williams.

          Women should not discriminate against women in the workplace because they are women.

          • milesrout 7 hours ago

            Plenty of men get asked to do work that takes them away from their families, including at special events.

            Controversial, but shouldn't be: men are on average better at standing up for themselves and saying "no".

            • k_g_b_ 6 hours ago

              I'm not sure whether men are truly better on average, or women are just on average more conditioned by our societies not to do so or even if, to do so in a manner that isn't effective.

              Unlearning ~2 decades of upbringing, education, expectations, some of that from religion, etc when entering the workforce could be pretty hard and significantly affect any statistics around this.

      • milesrout 7 hours ago

        It isn't violence. Stop this stupid hyperbole. Violence is a real term. Don't water it down.

        • latexr 7 hours ago

          “Violence” means “to damage or adversely affect” and includes psychological harm. This is recognised by dictionaries.

          • chasd00 5 hours ago

            I agree don’t trivialize violence. Sending an email or txt to asking for some talking points is not violent.

            • latexr 5 hours ago

              I don’t think anyone reasonably thinks that’s what the poster was saying. Presumably the violence is in creating the type of work environment where you are so oppressed or manipulated that you feel immense pressure to reply in that situation.

              If you’re checking your work email and replying to it during labour, I somehow doubt you feel like you were being “asked” and respected as a human being.

              But I don’t know the full story from all parties, and I get the feeling you don’t either. I wasn’t judging this particular case in my previous reply, merely pointing out that violence can take many forms and we shouldn’t narrow our thinking of what it means to do harm.

          • DeathArrow 4 hours ago

            Yes, the Newspeak dictionaries.

            • latexr 4 hours ago

              Are the Oxford and Collins dictionaries newspeak now? That’s a conspiracy theory I hadn’t heard before.

    • spoonjim 9 hours ago

      I agree for something like a McDonalds employee or even entry level software engineer but this is a senior managerial role at Facebook. Nobody needs to do this job. Unless your spending is out of control you do not need this income. So if it comes with unreasonable demands, I don’t really care. There are problems worth caring about and this ain’t one of them.

      • pastage 9 hours ago

        What the leadership does will be mirrored down to the grunt. I have never lead a multi billion dollars corporation but from my view if your team can discard someone easily, they can also bear not having that person around for two weeks. Or a year.

        Honestly I feel that father and mothers getting back from a years parental leave usually comes back with better focus.

    • zelphirkalt 9 hours ago

      In an alternative version of reality, she would be so distracted, that she failed to give birth and the child died as a consequence of her being completely absorbed in a toxic work culture. That alternative version of reality would be completely believable, and probably many would not be more surprised than now reading this news. This tells us all we need to know about FB.

    • raverbashing 10 hours ago

      > The other way is of an employee who has seen how her boss treats employees, and believes that her position, career, and livelihood would be in jeopardy if she wasn't working even in situations where no one should be expected to be working.

      Honestly, they need to grow a pair

      This kind of pressure (might) have worked for me if I was just out of university and such. But with experience you get to learn your boundaries

      You're a top-level executive and you're afraid of being let go by such a silly thing? They can't wait 2 or 3 days for "top level bullet points"? Seems like they depend on you more than you depend on them

      • amval 10 hours ago

        Big companies tend to develop cult dynamics. This is not an exaggeration, but a consequence of how humans tend to operate in large amounts. And I'd wager that in the case of Silicon Valley tech companies, this is also something that they embrace and nurture. I don't think this is a controversial take at all, and rather obvious.

        She was probably not "afraid of being let go" (fired), but had convinced herself that it was of the utmost importance to have this level of committment. The book probably reads similar to those books of someone who leaves their church or cult.

        • spoonjim 9 hours ago

          They tend to have cult dynamics because the people who subscribe to the cult dynamics are the ones who get promoted. If you’re happy to just make a living as a software engineer instead of trying to propel your way up the ladder of the world’s richest companies then you can live very happily and comfortably.

          • coliveira 5 hours ago

            Yes, but this is not the people they'll hire for this kind of job. They're looking for the batshit crazy that will do this kind of stuff. This is the reason for the psychological profile they do in lieu of interview, when hiring managers.

      • linotype 10 hours ago

        Not sure why you’re getting downvoted. These cowards are ruining workplaces everywhere by having no backbone and subjecting their subordinates to the whims of psychopathic leaders.

        Edit: it’s OK Meta employees. The best time to quit was years ago, the second best time is today.

        • raverbashing 9 hours ago

          At least they were not sleeping under their desks to stroke Musks's egomania.

  • wodenokoto 9 hours ago

    > My thinking is... can you put this 100% on Sandberg? I mean, I get that the culture is bad, but there's two in this game. Maybe... turn off your phone for a day when you're giving birth?!

    Kind of reminds me of this Simpsons joke: "Marge, it takes two to lie. One to lie, and one to listen."

  • blitzar 10 hours ago

    It's Facebook though - I can not think of a lower stakes workplace.

    Should the photo grid be 3 wide or 5 wide... Thank god ChatGPT can now pump out the mindless talking points for them.

    • poincaredisk 9 hours ago

      It's Facebook - a website that is a large part of life to over 3 billion users. A website that can influence elections in major countries, that sometimes shows fake ads and is responsible for (roughly) millions of frauds caused by them, that incited genocides in African countries.

      I don't think the stakes are that low.

      • avgd 8 hours ago

        > website that can influence elections in major countries,

        I think this sort of power transferred to twitter, with most of the users who haven't left facebook being boomers who keep reposting AI slop over and over and over.

        The rare times I look at my facebook account, all I see is the older members of my family spamming AI garbage like shrimp jesus, "look at this nice dog sculpture I made out of wood" (that I didn't actually make), videos of random nonsense like dogs taking care of toddlers and behaving like humans etc.

        FB has become AI slop no man's land.

        I don't even understand how facebook continues to operate at this point.

        • hobofan 6 hours ago

          > this sort of power transferred to twitter

          Twitter is not the place where the masses are being influenced. Especially outside the US, as in most other countries Twitter barely found adoption outside of tech and journalist circles.

          The majority of voting people (= old people) are still on Facebook. And besides Facebook, Meta also own Instagram. Meta is definitely the single company with the most encompassing political influence tool, should it choose to use it.

        • coliveira 5 hours ago

          I think people still use FB because it given them something to feel better. In Twitter/X you see all kinds of bad things happening, but in FB they sign up for groups that send only the things they like to see (most of that being fake, anyway).

  • KaiserPro 7 hours ago

    > My thinking is... can you put this 100% on Sandberg? I mean, I get that the culture is bad, but there's two in this game. Maybe... turn off your phone for a day when you're giving birth?!

    Do you want your job still?

    sure you can take "holiday", but if you don't please your capricious master, you'll not have a job to come back to.

    I can well believe that Sandberg is someone who lacks empathy of her immediate underlings, the mission comes first after all.

  • jocaal 10 hours ago

    None of the people you mentioned's companies sell products your life depends on. If you don't like them, don't use or buy their products. I'm of the opinion that AWS, facebook and tesla cars are genuine trash. I don't know why people use that stuff.

    • TeMPOraL 10 hours ago

      Because your opinion is wrong. Problems with social media notwithstanding, just because you don't like the person who's running/ruining/most associated with the brand, doesn't make the product itself bad.

      Most people don't give two fraks about who Bezos or Musk or Zuckerberg are, and they definitely don't think of them when using products and services from the companies you mentioned.

      • jocaal 7 hours ago

        I didn't say the products are trash because of who is at the helm of the companies. They are just bad compared to alternatives. Period.

      • close04 8 hours ago

        > just because you don't like the person who's running/ruining/most associated with the brand, doesn't make the product itself bad.

        And just because that product does something you need doesn't mean it's not trash. GP didn't say "all cloud, all social media, all cars". Heck, literal trash is not all trash, people throw away a lot of good stuff.

        Many people thought Tesla cars are diamond studded trash since Musk was still an idol. And it was pretty objective, great motor/battery surrounded by bargain bin components.

      • kubb 9 hours ago

        > just because you don't like the person...

        Do we need that person to keep having the product though?

        > Most people don't give two fraks...

        They sure don't. These products and services are more like a... public good, used by and available to everyone.

        But if it's a common good then should it be managed like a dictatorship?

        The people using them don't have an equivalent alternative, and the companies have moats on a scale never seen before. Is that an issue?

        Zuck is selling his customers wholesale, and squandering the resulting cash on asinine, unthinkably dumb projects like Metaverse. Maybe he should have just stayed with the initial product?

        Maybe these public platforms would better serve the people using them without the person running/ruining/most associated with the brand?

        • TeMPOraL 5 hours ago

          Maybe?

          I'm first to argue that, past certain size, social media platforms become de-facto town squares / utilities, and should be treated as such. But, until they are...

          > Zuck is selling his customers wholesale, and squandering the resulting cash on asinine, unthinkably dumb projects like Metaverse. Maybe he should have just stayed with the initial product?

          ... until they are, it's kind of the core axiom behind capitalism and market economy and social order in most places around the world, that this is his money, and if he wants to be "squandering the resulting cash on" (according to you) "asinine, unthinkably dumb projects like Metaverse", it's his prerogative.

          • kubb 4 hours ago

            Sure, currently Zuck can do anything he wants with the money he gets from the users in his cage.

            We should really open the cage though. Can you imagine being able to call people only on your mobile network, or being able to send e-mail only to people using the same e-mail provider?

            Yet we accept only being able to connect with, share photos and posts, message, subscribe to people on the same social platform as you.

            If we can define a technical specification for exchanging social data, and enforce that the platforms above certain size implement it, Zuck won't even have the cash to dump on Metaverse. Every platform can then have their own algorithmic feed so you can chose your own echo chamber.

            The moat is only good the Zucks of the world. It absolutely sucks for everyone else.

      • HenryBemis 10 hours ago

        > Because your opinion is wrong.

        I was having a strong argument/discussion yesterday with a friend who is a communist. A real "I want hammer and sickle" kinda guy. He owns two homes, works for big-pharma, his wife works for big-logistic, scuba-diving vacations across the planet, very 'communist' way of life.

        His opinions (just as the parent-commenter) are not 'wrong'. His/her/our/their (not pronouns, just groups of people) are different to ours. They got a different vision of this world (which of course it costs them nothing - until Communism settles and they are beheaded for having two homes, SP500 investments, and going scuba-diving across the planet!!)

        > Most people don't give two fraks

        "What are you talking about dude?? I got all these Gmail, and OneDrive, and Webex stuff for free!! It's like modern day communism!!" /s

        • kubb 9 hours ago

          This post is such a cocktail of confusion with a dash of McCarthyism that I have to say thank you for existing, and keeping the torch of this muddled thinking all the way from the post-war period.

          Thank you for never learning what communism means, for staying embattled and internalising the narrative, for your anecdotes about your rich friend who doesn't realize that communists are lurking out there, waiting to kill him and everyone with wealth, once they get in power.

          I'd ask you to never change, but I know that you won't, you'll paint your future thoughts through the same stencil that I've heard and seen so many times. When you express this it feels like I get a taste of the real America, a trailer park with the metheads, the uncle that just got back from jail, educating his young nephew about how the world works.

          "You see son, there are rich people and they are good. And there are bad folks called communists that are jealous and want to kill the good rich folks. Be sure to carry your gun with you and if you see any of them communists, shoot them up. Because we will be rich one day. God bless America."

        • milesrout 7 hours ago

          >a friend who is a communist.

          >His opinions (just as the parent-commenter) are not 'wrong'.

          Yes they are. Communism is obviously wrong. Are you joking?

          • guappa 6 hours ago

            Stop watching brainrot reels dude :D

    • CorrectHorseBat 10 hours ago

      That's a very naive take, not using their products doesn't stop them from negatively impacting society. Look at what Musk is doing over the whole world (and the other two aren't much better, just not as obvious about it). It's not about being fair or jealous or whatever, a single individual having so much wealth and thus power is simply not healthy for society.

    • z3t4 10 hours ago

      The problem is these companies buy competitors or bribe hardware/platforms in order to get market monopoly. So often it's impossible to find alternative products.

    • whatever1 10 hours ago

      You cannot avoid FB. They literally stalk you everywhere and sell your info to advertisers. You are their product whether you like it or not.

      • linotype 10 hours ago

        It’s easy to delete your account though. They may still track you, but you’re not feeding the attention machine.

        • HenryBemis 9 hours ago

          It won't 'protect' you. They still track you and have a shadow account for you, and sell the data. FB is a cancer that won't go away until we/you do.

          You can protect yourself by blocking all 'social media buttons' (as LI or Pinterest do the same), and for FB block every domain they use and their range of IPs. But there are so many trackers that will (eventually) get the 'job' done, so you either do 'more' (replace hosts file, add firewall on your Android and block ad broker, doubleclick, adjust, mopub, google analytics, etc. etc (loooooong list).

          Surveillance capitalism is not going anywhere. Where money can be made, money will be made.

          • disgruntledphd2 8 hours ago

            > It won't 'protect' you. They still track you and have a shadow account for you, and sell the data. FB is a cancer that won't go away until we/you do.

            Firstly, this is just not true. Like basically all users who couldn't be mapped to a FB person were given userid=0, which I guess is a shadow account, but it's pretty crap as a method of tracking people. Source: worked at FB for half a decade.

          • sanitycheck 7 hours ago

            I do all that, and don't use any Facebook products. It's not so hard, and has the benefit (to some) of never being invited to a WhatsApp group.

    • cess11 8 hours ago

      Have you tried figuring it out? It's not magic or miracle, there are reasons why they're profitable and if it's not obvious you might get surprised and learn something if you try to study it.

      One reason is that they are extremely manipulative and strategically exploit people with power over other people's money, notably taxes and what labour generates.

      • jocaal 7 hours ago

        They are super profitable because of the naivety of their customers and for that you can't blame the companies themselves.

        • cess11 4 hours ago

          Do you think fraud ought to be legal?

    • goodpoint 9 hours ago

      Boycotts might work occasionally but they are often not enough.

  • frereubu 9 hours ago

    These kinds of amoral corporate hierarchies will by their nature promote people who give themselves over entirely to the business. It's not that everyone who works there turns into that kind of corporate drone, it just weeds out the people who value more of a work/life balance. If someone is willing to send talking point while they're in labour, a company with the corporate culture of Facebook isn't going to stop them, they're going to be rewarded.

  • PaulRobinson 7 hours ago

    Blaming victims for the abuse they suffer is a common theme in modern society.

    The fact she felt she could not turn her phone off without there being consequences is the core point here.

    • DontchaKnowit 4 hours ago

      At a certain point ones unwillingness to accept consequences is capitulation pure and simple and it is what allows people to continue to behave shittily. Takes 2 to tango.

  • touwer 10 hours ago

    Don't foget the less visible guys (yes, it's a gender issue ;) like Thiel, Andreeeesssssen etc

  • MarceliusK 9 hours ago

    It's not just about one individual pushing for more... it's the entire system that values work over personal well-being and creates an environment where people feel they can't step away, even during life-changing events.

  • Galanwe 8 hours ago

    > Noone should be as big as Zuck, Musk, Altman, Bezos...

    There should be a level of market cap where you company has to split, period. Megacorps create oligarchs, ruin competition and cheat antitrust.

    • coliveira 5 hours ago

      There is a whole industry in the US to celebrate that some people are getting richer. And it is literally funded by some of the richest people in that list.

    • latexr 7 hours ago

      Or have a tax bracket after which you pay 100%.

  • mkoubaa 5 hours ago

    The more I learn about Sandberg the more I think she's actually psychotic

  • smokel 10 hours ago

    > Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

    Might it be an option that correlation and causation are reversed here?

    Given the amount of criticsm a typical leader of a large company, or even a country, gets these days, it is no wonder that people with narcissistic traits have an advantage. Somewhat more empathetic people would've given up already, either when they received a large enough reward, or whenever they got serious criticsm on bad practices.

    Free tip for a better society: stop worshipping success.

  • max_ 10 hours ago

    >Noone should be as big as Zuck, Musk, Altman, Bezos...

    What should be the maximum of how big someone should be?

    Humans are not perfect, whether "big" or "small".

    • fire_lake 10 hours ago

      Presumably this is intended to lead into an argument that because we disagree on exactly where the limit should be we shouldn’t have a limit at all. We could make the same case against drunk driving, speed limits, age of consent laws, maximum sentencing…

      • ratmice 10 hours ago

        Yeah, I don't know why we would need a limit, I'm sure if a temper tantrum devolves into one of them building their own robo army. The others will follow suit and it will all just balance itself out.

    • kelnos 10 hours ago

      Certainly the "maximum big level" is something that reasonable people could disagree about, but I don't think a society is healthy when people can get as big as Zuckerberg, Musk, Altman, and Bezos have gotten.

      Individuals should not have that much power. It's not healthy.

      • max_ 10 hours ago

        It is definitely not healthy.

        But I don't think you can limit people's wealth and not call it communism.

        I think the real problem is abuse of power, not accumulation of it.

        Power cannot be eliminated. It will either end up in the hand of politicians (who are genuinely more evil than tech bros) or remain in hands of wealth creators.

        What we should do is focus of punishingpeople who abuse thier power.

        • supriyo-biswas 9 hours ago

          Somewhat similar to Paul Graham's essay _Inequality and Risk_[1]:

          > I realize startups are not the main target of those who want to eliminate economic inequality. What they really dislike is the sort of wealth that becomes self-perpetuating through an alliance with power. ... But if you try to attack this type of wealth through economic policy, it's hard to hit without destroying startups as collateral damage.

          > The problem here is not wealth, but corruption. So why not go after corruption?

          [1] https://paulgraham.com/inequality.html

          • UncleMeat 5 hours ago

            This is a convenient cover because it allows people to convert a measurable and fairly concrete thing into a more vague and flexible thing. Suddenly, all somebody needs to do is make a claim that what they are doing isn't corruption and they are off the hook. They'll be hypothetical billionaires that are the problem, but never any actual action.

        • borgdefenser 6 hours ago

          Then the people who punish those in power will gain too much power.

          The reality is our system is not compatible with the internet. Our system is made for a network with much lower density and clustering coefficient. When you crank these up with the internet, it creates power law distributions everywhere.

          Complaining a few people have all the wealth when we have created a society with this massive power law distribution of wealth is just pointlessly stupid. Of course they do.

          There is nothing really to figure out. The system isn't going to work long term. I think most people are just in denial of this because they think there is a solution. No, what we are doing right now, communicating like this, is the problem itself.

          Of course, if we stopped using the internet society would collapse too.

          There is no solution.

        • vnorilo 10 hours ago

          > But I don't think you can limit people's wealth and not call it communism.

          In communism, an individual can not own any means of production - effectively 0% of the society's total capital. I don't think it follows that any non-communist system must permit any single individual to gain up to 100% of the society's wealth.

          I don't know what the limit could look like or how to make it work, but societies commonly called capitalist already implement various brakes on free trade, from regulation to capital and immigration controls, subsidies, tariffs...

        • piaste 10 hours ago

          > But I don't think you can limit people's wealth and not call it communism.

          Is that your actual objection? It sounds more like a smear by association.

          Famously, the USA under Eisenhower had a top marginal tax rate of 90% on income over $200K - "merely" a few million dollars in modern-day money.

          Was the Eisenhower administration Communist? If it wasn't, would it have become Communist if they had gone a bit further and added a marginal rate of 99% for income over oh, let's say $20M (a few hundred million dollars nowadays)?

          I think if you traveled back in time and proposed such a bill, the reaction from folks like Senator McCarthy would not have been "that's Communism" but more likely "that's a ridiculous and useless bill, how could anyone ever accumulate that much personal wealth? It would be absurd".

          • mythrwy an hour ago

            Andrew Carnegie was worth something like 300 billion USD (today, inflation adjusted). So that level of wealth was not unknown by the time of the Eisenhower administration.

        • mola 8 hours ago

          Power can be diffused. Wealth accumulation is power concentration. When it's legal to buy politicians then what is corruption? How can you go after corruption when those with power define what is corruption?

          Concentrated power is corrupt, there's no power without the will to wield it. If you have more power than 99 percent of humans, they become insects for you.

        • cjfd 9 hours ago

          One question is why communism is a problem. It is a problem because it is a totalitarian regime. I.e., a non-democratic government. I am not sure limiting peoples wealth is the actual problem with communism.

          Sure, the real problem is the abuse of power. This is the nature of power, though. Give a person or an organization too much power and it will find a way to abuse it. In democratic government, the power of the government is limited by having three independent branches where, at the least, the laws are being made by representatives of the people. In democratic government there are some evil politicians but not too many. In the US the situation went completely off the rails and one of the parties completely deteriorated. I cannot help thinking that statements like 'politicians, who are genuinely more evil' are part of the problem. I.e., this became a self-fulfilling prophecy. The party where people tend to believe this turns out the consist of crooks, is maybe not that surprising.

          'What we should do is focus of punishing people who abuse their power.'. Well, this presumes that there are institutions capable of doing this. For instance, a democratic government.

        • alterom 7 hours ago

          >But I don't think you can limit people's wealth and not call it communism

          I'll have "Everything I don't like is communism" for 500, Alex.

          Ever heard of this little-known thing called taxes?

          Particularly, progressive taxation and wealth taxes.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_tax

          >What we should do is focus of punishingpeople who abuse thier power.

          Wealth isn't power.

          Obscene accumulation of wealth is abuse of power in and of itself.

        • jemmyw 7 hours ago

          You can limit people's wealth and it's not communism. If it was communism then they wouldn't have any wealth at all. A limit would just be democratic capitalism with a limit. There's no rule in capitalism that says you can't be taxed, or that the taxes couldn't be designed to approach a wealth limit. It's an economic system, not an entire governmental and social handbook.

        • sethammons 9 hours ago

          There are several faults with this reasoning. Capital attracts capital, and with too low of marginal taxes, it pools at the top, increasing wealth inequality, hurting the non-elite's ability to compete, and squeezes the middle class. To say marginal taxes is communism is just wrong.

          Capital attracting capital is as natural as power corrupting people. Instead of hoping people play nice and punishing the few who get caught and hoping against nature, the better alternative is to set up systems that encourage healthy, competitive markets through sensible rules, regulations, and redistribution.

          Edit: re the socialism/communism scarecrow, back when woman started wearing pants in the US, they called it socialist. That same logic is oft applied today.

        • palata 10 hours ago

          > But I don't think you can limit people's wealth and not call it communism.

          Of course you can. Those billionaires don't pay much taxes, but normal people do. And we don't call that communism.

          > It will either end up in the hand of politicians (who are genuinely more evil than tech bros)

          This is a very weird take. In a functioning democracy (which the US are not at the moment), politicians are elected to represent the people. If they are evil, we change them. Tech bros are not elected, period.

          > What we should do is focus of punishingpeople who abuse thier power.

          That's where you completely miss the problem: the problem is that when people get too powerful, we cannot punish them anymore.

          Similar with companies: you have to prevent companies to become as big as the FAANGs before they do. Otherwise they become too powerful and do whatever they want.

        • js8 10 hours ago

          > But I don't think you can limit people's wealth and not call it communism.

          What is wrong with calling it communism? It's just a name.. You so much internalized "communism bad" that you look at a good idea and think it is bad because it reminds you something else that was implemented badly.

          And by the way, you can also call it democratic socialism (democratic is really redundant).

    • cjfd 10 hours ago

      The imperfections of 'big' people have much more ramifications than the imperfections of 'small' people. Humans work best together in much more egalitarian groups where the imperfections of individuals are compensated by the strengths of other individuals.

    • mola 9 hours ago

      You probably don't have an issue with limiting government power. Why is limiting an individual reaching power of governments so difficult to fathom?

      The problem is power accumulation, "small" people have a harder time limiting my freedoms by abusing their power.

      I don't want a king, whether they got to be king by swords or money.

    • js8 10 hours ago

      > What should be the maximum of how big someone should be?

      In democracy, the maximum should be 1. One vote per person. That's it.

      In practice, we can delegate stuff, but I don't see reason why should people (as adults) accept any sort of authoritarianism in their lives.

    • UncleMeat 5 hours ago

      I don't know what the maximum wealth should be, but I do know that it is lower than one billion dollars. So let's start there.

      Billionaires are bad for society.

    • palata 10 hours ago

      > Humans are not perfect, whether "big" or "small".

      Still, I've never seen a poor human becoming an oligarch.

      The problem is not that those billionaires are not perfect, rather that they have too much power.

  • roywashere 9 hours ago

    > Good to have more people expose the greedy, dictatorial, detrimental shitshow that is single individuals having an outsized control over important technology. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Noone should be as big as Zuck, Musk, Altman, Bezos...

    People amassing more money than entire countries just should not happen. "Eat the rich"!

    • hermannj314 8 hours ago

      Tuvalu has a GDP of $70 million. Is that the line?

      It is a very small country.

      • ubercore 7 hours ago

        You're trying pretty hard to miss the point here.

      • FooBarBizBazz 7 hours ago

        Honestly that seems high enough, yeah.

CaptainZapp 11 hours ago

She said Wynn-Williams’ allegations about Kaplan are false, and in a Thursday statement, she called the book “defamatory” and alleged that Wynn-Williams had skipped “the industry’s standard fact-checking process.

(emph, mine)

This, coming from a Meta spokesperson, is rather rich.

  • aoanevdus 10 hours ago

    I’m curious what would be considered the industry standard for fact checking in tech. Does Google Search, Apple App Store, TikTok, Snapchat, Amazon store, etc. apply fact-checking to the content posted by users/sellers?

    Or more abstractly, is fact-checking the responsibility of authors and content editors, or of platforms and infrastructure that spread the content?

    • greg_V 5 hours ago

      I mean if you're publishing a book, especially a tell-all one, you'd go and talk to sources familiar with the matter who can independently verify whether the statements are true or not to shield you against defamation lawsuits.

      Publishing anything dodgy about the biggest tech executives on the planet without that would lead your company getting nuked from orbit

    • blitzar 9 hours ago

      Wikipedia is the gold standard. Good enough is asking Grok.

      • pcthrowaway 8 hours ago

        A Youtuber I follow got in an argument a couple of days ago with someone who kept claiming the expulsion of 750,000 Palestinians in 1948 was primarily voluntary (not by force or a response to threats to their safety). The Youtuber kept asking him for sources (providing his own to the contrary), and the contrarian kept, I shit you not, asking Grok and then citing Grok as his source.

        We are fucked.

        • latexr 7 hours ago

          I’ve seen people smugly post ChatGPT screenshots without commentary with the intent of ending a conversation in a “I’m right and this proves it” way.

          Of course, the wronger the answer is the more likely they are to have that attitude.

  • dep_b 10 hours ago

    It was fact checked: in Texas

  • kubb 11 hours ago

    My goodness, the audacity.

  • heresie-dabord 5 hours ago

    > skipped “the industry’s standard fact-checking process."

    And the industry in question has compromised its host culture. What is Truth now?

    This billionaire corporate sociopath suggested "Facebook remake the news ecosystem with the company at its center."

    How is the corporate propaganda business working out socially and politically? I see the stock valuations — perhaps they are a measure of what has been lost in stability and community.

    > "I’ve seen him face so many choices and lose touch with whatever fundamental human decency"

    Including the rush to dismantle fact-checking in his corporation's product, which has become THE news source for millions of citizens.

gchadwick 11 hours ago

A dupe of my comment from another post on this (relating to the US arbiter ruling that she may not promote the book https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43351949)

People may be interested in the interview with Wynn-Williams (the whistleblower) on the News Agents podcast: https://www.globalplayer.com/podcasts/episodes/7DrpKCA/ (it's a UK news/political podcast very popular in the UK). From what they said at the beginning I think this is her first big podcast interview about the book/her claims. I wonder if she chose a UK podcast because of the US arbiter ruling.

rchaud 5 hours ago

> she called the book “defamatory” and alleged that Wynn-Williams had skipped “the industry’s standard fact-checking process.”

Why don't we let the community decide, instead of these bureaucratic, free speech-chilling "fact checkers"? If it's good enough for your employer, it should be good enough for you.

https://www.npr.org/2025/01/07/nx-s1-5251151/meta-fact-check...

paxys 6 hours ago

Don't worry Zuckerberg is a free speech crusader. She can post all her criticism directly on Facebook and it won't be removed, whether it is true or not.

Oh Facebook is taking her to court to block her speech? Hmmm..

MarceliusK 9 hours ago

The fact that Meta is aggressively trying to suppress the book just reinforces the point. If it were all "misleading and unfounded," they wouldn't need to fight this hard to bury it.

  • 2muchcoffeeman 9 hours ago

    That’s not true. Just look at the current climate. If I repeat lies often enough, people will repeat the same lies and start to believe.

    • MarceliusK 9 hours ago

      That's a fair point, repetition can make falsehoods stick. But if the book were full of outright lies, Meta could challenge it with clear evidence rather than legal pressure

      • __loam 9 hours ago

        Or actually sue.

    • luma 6 hours ago

      They repeatedly claim (in the article) that the allegations are "old news". That isn't a denial.

2muchcoffeeman 9 hours ago

Hahahahahaha, sore over losing in Ticket to Ride and Catan. Those aren’t even “serious” games.

  • KingMob 7 hours ago

    In addition to it all, Zuck's taste in board games is basic.

    Though he's still ahead of Elon, who was busted for boosting his Path of Exile 2 account.

    • bboozzoo 2 hours ago

      > In addition to it all, Zuck's taste in board games is basic.

      FWIW, Ticket to Ride and Catan are decent, worth playing, euro games. That's miles better than Monopoly or Risk which the casual folk immediately think of in the context of board games.

    • hnthrow90348765 6 hours ago

      I want Elon to play EVE Online, it'll be a shitshow for him

  • xnyan 2 hours ago

    I only play serious and important board games.

    • 2muchcoffeeman 36 minutes ago

      You don’t throw a tantrum over a board game. Because they are just games. The outcome doesn’t matter. Even worse when it’s a simple game that’s barely competitive.

KaiserPro 7 hours ago

Can anyone answer this question, assuming its answerable:

if they signed a mutual non-disparagement agreement, and they are currently using that agreement to stop a publication, if meta goes and breaks that agreement, doesn't that nullify the contract?

baxtr 8 hours ago

This triggers my cautionary nerve a bit. I think it is important to recognize that she wants to sell a book.

I am not saying she isn't doing this because she has a cause. I am also not saying she is lying or anything.

But if you sell a book you can't deny that there might be a conflict of interest. Potentially she paints things more extreme than they really were.

  • rchaud 5 hours ago

    What makes more money, working at Facebook in an executive role or putting out a book that people might hear about but almost certainly won't buy?

    I don't see these types of books as business opportunities.

  • paulryanrogers 5 hours ago

    Selling an exaggerated or untrue story about powerful people also opens one up to expensive legal processes and consequences.

Neil44 8 hours ago

All else aside Zuck was basically a kid when the whole Facebook rocket ship ride took off. Nobody is their best self all day every day. Personally I always thought he came over as kind of an asshole but you have to keep hit pieces like these in the right frame. The shortest accurate answer to what's Zuck like is "I never met him" the rest is just clicks and hot air.

  • luma 6 hours ago

    But the author here worked with him directly for years, the article recounts several personal interactions that went weird. You haven't met him, neither have I, but the person we're talking about certainly has.

  • klelatti 5 hours ago

    Are you really saying that first hand evidence of Zuck’s character is irrelevant to our understanding of him because it relates to a period when he was relatively young? We can’t use that together with his more recent actions to create a more complete picture of his character and motivations. That biographies should all start at age 30?

ViktorRay 4 hours ago

One section of this article seems intellectually dishonest.

“Over one dinner, Zuckerberg said Andrew Jackson — known for his populist appeal and his inhumane relocation of Native Americans — was America’s best president and “it’s not even close,” according to Wynn-Williams. ”

There are many reasons someone could have a person be a favorite president. It’s unfair to bring up the worst thing a president did in response to someone saying that this president or that president is their favorite.

For example I have liberal friends who say FDR is their favorite president. It would be unfair to say then “FDR known for throwing Japanese people in internment camps was the favorite president of Joe Smith!”

I have friends who say Obama was their favorite president. Imagine someone saying “Obama who killed thousands through drone attacks was the favorite president of Jane Smith!”

Anyway when it comes to Andrew Jackson specifically I had a libertarian friend in high school who was a big fan of him because he helped eliminate the Bank of the United States. I was in high school taking AP US History around the time Ron Paul was running for president so I believe my libertarian friend was connecting Ron Paul’s opposition to the Federal Reserve with Andrew Jackson’s anti Bank of US policies.

I don’t know why Zuckerberg likes Andrew Jackson so much. I wish the article had said it.

pc86 5 hours ago

1. I hate these "click-and-hold" "bot" "detectors" that takes 6, 7 seconds or longer to complete.

2. Making me do it three times in a row is just obnoxious.

lvl155 6 hours ago

This place worships Zuck because he apparently “open sourced” AI. It’s the most ridiculous narrative on its own but we also live in the most absurd moment in history.

kumarvvr 10 hours ago

We still haven't found out how to use the internet to socialize, without resorting to giving power to a central entity.

If there is something out there that can do this, profitably, then we can kiss these mega social giants good bye.

I heard about the Blue Sky protocol, but it still feels primitive.

  • xoac 10 hours ago

    You realize people (including me) were socializing on the internet before any of these big companies existed, right?

    • wyclif 5 hours ago

      There was this open protocol (that still exists!) called IRC. Also: Usenet and email.

      • kube-system 5 hours ago

        Facebook has 3 billion users. IRC and Usenet basically round to zero by comparison.

        Email is the real answer here, but the reason it is better is the same reason Facebook et al took over.

    • kube-system 5 hours ago

      Most people weren’t, until the big companies came around and commoditized it.

    • ohgr 10 hours ago

      We also still do it!

  • Juliate 9 hours ago

    _Centralized platforms_ socialising happened around 2004, Facebook being one big survivor of that time. Because then, centralising stuff to provide a massive service proved more efficient (money wise: resources, investment, control, ads).

    But socialising on the internet? There were plenty of options before, around and after then. Only, they didn't get the same support, convergence and effort since then. Because most people trusted the centralized services would opt to do the right things eventually. Ha. Fools were we.

croes 5 hours ago

Aut Zuck, aut nihil.

-__---____-ZXyw 7 hours ago

Zuck: Yeah so if you ever need info about anyone at Harvard

Zuck: Just ask.

Zuck: I have over 4,000 emails, pictures, addresses, SNS

[Redacted Friend's Name]: What? How'd you manage that one?

Zuck: People just submitted it.

Zuck: I don't know why.

Zuck: They "trust me"

Zuck: Dumb fucks.

kelnos 10 hours ago

Not really surprised. It's good to have more people talking about how these people act out of the public eye. But all of this makes me a little less optimistic, and just reminds me that powerful people are rarely held accountable for all the messed up stuff they do.

ksynwa 10 hours ago

My conception of world conquering ambition comes mostly from popular media so trying to imagine Zuckerberg trying to become the world's stenographer through a platform that is 90% boomer-bait AI slop is a bit disorienting.

dzonga 10 hours ago

you don't become a global ceo without being an absolute killer and not having non-questionable morals. I can make up different stuff about how a ceo can be amoral, and those would still apply to zuck / {{ whoelse }} book meant to be sold at airports for bored people. non-story.

  • dep_b 10 hours ago

    This is probably true if you look at all big tech companies, but before Windows, MacOS, Oracle Databases or IBM computers did not have the responsibility of dealing with the communication and shaping of world view of billions of people world wide.

    It's the same as owning a large share of news papers or TV channels. You own the public discourse.

    If Larry Ellison is a greedy immoral bastard I switch to MS SQL Server, or something open source. When Zuckerberg or Musk became greedy immoral bastards, they started to shape the information fed to the world. You can decide not to buy a Tesla, but you cannot escape the results of brainwashing of other people that vote.

    Bill Gates had serious trouble for including a free Internet Browser in his Operating System, because he was not able to influence the public discourse. The new internet mass communication companies do. Google never really got into much trouble while their monopoly was stronger.

    • alex1138 9 hours ago

      I know your comment isn't about Elon specifically and I have my own reservations about some of what he does, but it's important to point out (and maybe this depends on what you call "misinformation", it shapes all future discussion) that Twitter absolutely was censoring for partisan reasons (before he bought it; I know some have complained Musk does indeed ban his critics) including silencing covid dissent, real doctors and researchers getting kicked off. Him acquiring it was absolutely necessary to break the deadlock

      Edit: We do not want our platforms to be owned by someone like Susan Wojcicki who inflated her own importance and who thought mass censorship is ok (Google has really abrogated their responsibility here)

      • skyyler 7 hours ago

        The censorship hasn’t reduced under Elon, who it’s directed at has changed.

      • dep_b 4 hours ago

        I don't think Twitter was great before Elon either, but it's definitely worse than before. But I also don't see how Susan Wojcicki was abusing it's leverage like Musk does.

        But the US simply stopped fighting against tech monopolies at a given point. And started mocking the EU for doing what was common for the US until recently.

        • alex1138 3 hours ago

          Susan made a personal pledge to tackle "misinformation". Like these people https://rumble.com/vt62y6-covid-19-a-second-opinion.html (you actually can find the shortened version on Youtube, but all of those people with real credentials have had their videos pulled at one time or another)

          That's not her role. You should be policing the obvious stuff but not that, especially when none of it turns out to be misinformation. She absolutely abrogated her responsibility as CEO or even just being a decent person

      • pastage 8 hours ago

        Everything is not partisan it might be political. The Republican vs. Democratic is hurting the US badly you can not continue to make everything ok just because you need the support from whatever extreme views is populist in your party.

        Most of the things a party does is not extreme but you guys are going insane over there.

      • Hikikomori 6 hours ago

        The twittefiles nothingburger?

        • alex1138 3 hours ago

          I really hope you don't actually work in tech and are putting your thumb on the scale of decisions

        • wyclif 5 hours ago

          Sorry not sorry, but that was no "nothingburger." The fact of the matter was that Twitter under Jack Dorsey had become completely bloated and abusive. You had people working there whose only job was to do things like manipulate pixels in emojis and more seriously, they had created a vast and cancerous DEI bureaucracy.

          • Hikikomori 4 hours ago

            Guses the government is also that? You're choking on that coolaid.

  • wqaatwt 8 hours ago

    Seems like historical founders/CEOs like e.g. Hewlett and Packard were relatively decent people despite being immensely successful.

    So at least it was possible back in the day (of course after this many years a lot of details were lost and overall standards and expectations were very different back then).

  • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago

    > you don't become a global ceo without being an absolute killer

    This is nonsense. Plenty of good people are wildly successful. The difference is they aren’t addicted to the role, and so see a future for themselves beyond it. Connecting with that future self, in turn, effects their decisions today—at work, at home, in society.

    We have a cadre of sociopaths leading our commercial giants. That is a fixable problem. Saying it’s a non-story is just being nihilistic and lazy.

    • blitzar 9 hours ago

      Boards have a lot to answer for, and in theory at least, this is their responsibility.

      It did not work out that well for the OpenAi board however.

      • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago

        > Boards have a lot to answer for, and in theory at least, this is their responsibility

        Boards have plenty of things they're properly responsible for. CEO sociopathy isn't one of them, especially not if it's the profitable type of assholery. The regulation has to come from outside.

        • wqaatwt 8 hours ago

          How do you legally stop extremely ambitious sociopaths from obtaining positions of power?

          • JumpCrisscross 31 minutes ago

            > How do you legally stop extremely ambitious sociopaths from obtaining positions of power?

            You limit their power. Musk has broken important rules and gotten away with it. Stop doing that. Zuckerberg and Facebook, meanwhile, should have been fined back into the single-digit billionaire category for the terror they’ve unleashed on our children.

  • nonrandomstring 5 hours ago

    > you don't become a global ceo without being an absolute killer

    This idea is very parochial and American, and it's unfortunate in spreading a wrong idea that gives license for some people to behave as hooligans.

    There are massive global companies most of us have never heard of, with CEOs who shun publicity and operate in what is really a mild-mannered but highly competent fashion.

    Power also comes from politeness, tact, diplomacy, and the earned attachment of subordinates we call "respect".

    They are not constantly immersed in scandal and drama because most of the employees never have much cause to interact negatively.

    The cult of US Tech leaders is a vile and embarrassing spectacle of vanity, tantrums, acting-out, histrionics and arrogance. It's very poor human behaviour that harms the perception of business in the wider world, and we should not hold it up as normative.

stackedinserter 5 hours ago

What's up, old baits like "ZUCKERBERG TRIED TO STOP THIS BOOK" don't work anymore?

tucnak 5 hours ago

On a different note; it's funny how otherwise reasonable people (on HN but also in general) become stereotypical gossiping girls whenever there's expose on %famous_person% or a cheap ideological position to have fun with. Woah, corporate America sure rewards the fucked-up people! We do, indeed, live in a society. Chirp chirp

  • areyourllySorry 5 hours ago

    yet you participate in society. curious! i am very intelligent

blogabegonija 11 hours ago

After all what Meta did? Who could have thought. And yet people love to upload photos of their children on pedobook.

wnevets 7 hours ago

> Has anyone ever seen Facebbok as idealistic?

In my experience they were react coders

piokoch 7 hours ago

What's a surprise, a guy who has stolen startup from Winklevoss brothers and had to settle the case in the court has a "brutal image". Who would've expected that!

tasuki 8 hours ago

Yes, well, she was fired. I'm sure she's completely unbiased.

If it was so bad, why did she work there? She was a senior executive, not a wage-slave.

  • xnyan 2 hours ago

    Bias is universal. Being as open as you can with both yourself and others as to what those biases are is the foundation of honesty.

    Said another way, all movie reviews are biased because we all have different tastes and preferences, we have all seen different movies which colors how we perceive new movies, we all have different values and limits, the list goes on. I like movie reviewers with a strong opinion, even/especially if that opinion does not agree with my own. Because I understand their strong opinions (their biases), I can easily apply my own analysis and decision-making to their opinion.

  • firstplacelast 6 hours ago

    I unfortunately agree with this take, but her (probably) being a crappy person and looking to monetize her experience is exactly why she worked there and there is likely a lot of truth there under her bias.

    Years ago, an acquaintence was an exec at a tech company that imploded in a semi-public way. He decided he wanted to get a documentary made on the whole thing and sent me his pitch. A little too self-aggrandizing, which I pointed out among other things. Couple years go by and a doc did come out on it (not his), uncovers some shady things and lawsuits against the CEO…and a little bit of embezzlement on his part.

    So I think you’re right on the money, there’s a reason she worked there. Sucky/shady company and she fit in well.

abc123abc123 5 hours ago

Sounds like a disgruntled social justice warrior. I avoid such people at all costs. They quickly make the environment extremely toxic!

readthenotes1 10 hours ago

"Joel Kaplan, had sexually harassed her. ... and Kaplan, the company’s newly appointed president of global affairs;"

Nominative determinism?

--

On a different note, Obama, the ex-president with theoretically no official power, is calling up CEOs privately to get them to behave differently?

Seems like the Twitter files weren't the only corporate being influenced

  • kelnos 10 hours ago

    > On a different note, Obama, the ex-president with theoretically no official power, is calling up CEOs privately to get them to behave differently?

    The article's phrasing was a bit murky, but I read that to mean that Obama called after or around the 2016 election, while he was still president.

  • KaiserPro 7 hours ago

    > On a different note, Obama, the ex-president with theoretically no official power, is calling up CEOs privately to get them to behave differently?

    Then its a private citizen calling someone in their network. standard 1st amendment stuff right

    If its making a speech about it in public, again perfectly above board.

    Threatening to use executive power in private, very much not.

    However the USA is arresting people for organising protests, so that whole freedom of speech thing has gone a bit stale, alas.