How Facebook Praises and Pressures a Country's Leader To Get Exactly What It Wants (qz.com) 24
The Irish Independent has published correspondence between Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg and Irish prime minister Enda Kenny, obtained through a freedom of information law request. Facebook's European headquarters are in Dublin, Ireland. The document reveals that Sheryl Sandberg lobbied Irish Prime Minister to influence Ireland's choice of official who would regulate them. From a report: The documents provides a rare window into how one of the world's most powerful technology companies conducts its business. In one email, after a meeting between Sandberg and Kenny at the annual World Economic Forum conference in Davos in early 2014, the Facebook executive praises the Irish politician's position on a set of sweeping, new, Europe-wide data privacy laws. "You and your staff really internalized our concerns," she writes. "And were able to present them in a reasonable way, which has had a positive impact." After that compliment, Sandberg turns to the matter of global tax law reform at the OECD, which Kenny was also involved in. Here, she raises the prospect of Facebook shifting its investment strategy in Europe. After noting that the tax discussions would be "very complicated," Sandberg wrote: "We hope to be helpful to you identifying the implications with different options for future investment and growth in Europe." That suggestion came as Facebook was in the process of expanding its Dublin office and headcount.
Haha (Score:2, Funny)
You killed Kenny!
You bastards!
Re: and? (Score:4, Informative)
Exactly.
*NEWS FLASH* SCANDAL: Facebook lobbies governments.
If this is how they lobby, then this is some of the mildest I've seen. Compare this to NRA or Tobacco lobbies. E.g.
http://www.sacbee.com/news/pol... [sacbee.com]
https://www.google.com/amp/s/w... [google.com]
Wow (Score:3)
Wow. They wanted favorable policies, and said they might set up shop elsewhere if they didn't get favorable government policies. In the end, "Facebook appears to have won some concessions."
Holy shit, mind blown!
Double standard (Score:2)
When wealthy Russian businessmen use their wealth and power to try to influence a government to adopt conservative policies, there's a partisan witch hunt and people act like it's incredibly scandalous. However, when Facebook uses their greater wealth and power to try to influence governments, it's tolerated. Facebook, of course, tends to support their own business interests and liberal positions. Why is it scandalous when conservative Russians try to influence governments but tolerated when a leftist Ameri
Re: (Score:2)
When corporate ass holes use their power to influence the public as extortion to force obedience from politicians to inflate the power and profits of those corporations they are neither left nor right, progressives nor conservatives, they a greedy psychopaths who give not one fuck about anything except their own greed and lusts, they are fucking arse holes and all of them should be investigated and prosecuted for their intent, extortion with intent to harm society to benefit themselves. Don't give a fuck wh
Foreign power meddling in an election (Score:3)
if ( not US ) then evil
An Taoiseach (Score:4, Informative)
Enda Kenny is An Taoiseach (pronounced very similarly to "On Tee-Shock"). That's his official title, and not Prime Minister, which is the official title in the UK.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
Even the original article uses his actual title.
Re: (Score:2)
At least FB doesn't have a motto (Score:2)
like "Don't be Evil" to violate with its behavior.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, that's true. The thing that bothers me when Google does something evil is just the hypocrisy. I'm fine with the actual evil act.</sarcasm>
Re: (Score:2)
This is something that professors teaching MBA classes might find interesting enough to use in the classroom, but it's nothing new or unusual. If anything, it's old and usual.
Re: (Score:2)
That's a good point. What are the limits of ethical lobbying? I think there should be a clear limit when it comes to influencing the selection of your regulator.
Re: (Score:2)
If facebook was offering bribes, that would be a different matter entirely.
aaaaand.... (Score:2)