Sarah Wynn-Williams wrote a memoir about her times as a very ambitious young executive, working on international policies at Facebook. She was close to but not close with Mark Zuckerberg, Joel Kaplan, Sheryl Sandberg, and Elliot Schrage.
First half of the book describes her work. It was what I hoped to read when I took that book. It describes hard-working people, self-absorbed, ambitious, awkward, making honest mistakes, stupid mistakes, moving on, forgiving. Lots of internal politics, relationships, some favoritism and harassment. I managed to extract a positive idea out of it and wrote a post- Think Wrong, Move Fast and Break Things. I wish the book stopped there and the shocking airplane bed was the last chapter.
The second half is like swimming in a pool full of excrements with an occasional crocodile. All of the mentioned names lose their souls in the pursuit of goals, which seems to be humanly random and randomly human but completely unacceptable. One wants to promote a book probably filled with lies. Another wants to sleep with everyone from the opposite gender using his authority as a leverage. A third wants to be the emperor of Rome but realizes he’s already surpassed that. And all of them show the empathy of a hungry crocodile. But that’s only the beginning of the dreaded second part.
Then Sarah Wynn-Williams goes into details about election meddling, promoting violence and confrontation as an engagement tool, helping the far-right politicians and dictators around the globe because that would allow a better growth for the company, and even accuses Facebook for treason with their activities in China. She describes individual poops from the poop pool.
I knew Facebook is used that way – every time I watch more than 10 Facebook shorts, one will be by a pro-Russian troll account and maybe 3-4 will use other people’s content. They don’t hesitate to block my posts when I link to this blog but have never positively responded to a hate speech report or removed a fraudulent advertisement that I reported to my memories. Their moderation for Bulgaria has always been oddly biased in favor of anti-democratic forces. But the events from the book describe that in a world-level scale, engineered to be that way for money and power.
I don’t know if the book is true. I found Sarah Wynn-Williams’s Senate hearing, trying to get an impression. I can’t quite relate to any of these people, the author, the interviewers but it matches my expectations. It’s a cautionary tale about why the free, independent, and decentralized web is important, why and how the walled gardens are harming our society, and why kids should not be allowed to use social media.
I’m on Facebook, my friends are there. What do I do?
That’s so scary, but also expected.
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It’s also sad because we are hostages to their services, their money, and their political muppets.
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But we are not like them and won’t be
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I await an answer to your final question.
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Since the pandemic I’ve concisely try to only use FB to publish things and not to read anything from it. I think we should just be aware of the promoted content.
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It’s not about the promoted content, according to what I interpreted from the book, Facebook has an ideological agenda. They promote far-right and anti-democracy because hate increases engagement and it’s easier to negotiate with power-hungry politicians.
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Scary reality.
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It goes back to the (fairly recent, I discovered) adage that: “If you are not paying for it, you’re not the customer; you’re the product being sold.”
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Great review! I think it’s probably a good thing you struggle to identify with any of these people..
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I meant the author and the senators who interviewed her but yeah, applies to Zuckerberg and his executives.
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Just found it and recommended it to my husband, thanks
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Do you like this garden?
Why is it yours?
See to it that your children don’t destroy it.
(Or, alternatively)
Do you like this garden?
Why is it yours?
We evict those who destroy it.
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