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After Meta Blocks Whistleblower's Book Promotion, It Becomes an Amazon Bestseller (thetimes.com) 25

After Meta convinced an arbitrator to temporarily prevent a whistleblower from promoting their book about the company (titled: Careless People), the book climbed to the top of Amazon's best-seller list. And the book's publisher Macmillan released a defiant statement that "The arbitration order has no impact on Macmillan... We will absolutely continue to support and promote it." (They added that they were "appalled by Meta's tactics to silence our author through the use of a non-disparagement clause in a severance agreement.")

Saturday the controversy was even covered by Rolling Stone: [Whistleblower Sarah] Wynn-Williams is a diplomat, policy expert, and international lawyer, with previous roles including serving as the Chief Negotiator for the United Nations on biosafety liability, according to her bio on the World Economic Forum...

Since the book's announcement, Meta has forcefully responded to the book's allegations in a statement... "Eight years ago, Sarah Wynn-Williams was fired for poor performance and toxic behavior, and an investigation at the time determined she made misleading and unfounded allegations of harassment. Since then, she has been paid by anti-Facebook activists and this is simply a continuation of that work. Whistleblower status protects communications to the government, not disgruntled activists trying to sell books."

But the negative coverage continues, with the Observer Sunday highlighting it as their Book of the Week. "This account of working life at Mark Zuckerberg's tech giant organisation describes a 'diabolical cult' able to swing elections and profit at the expense of the world's vulnerable..."

Though ironically Wynn-Williams started their career with optimism about Facebook's role in the app internet.org. . "Upon witnessing how the nascent Facebook kept Kiwis connected in the aftermath of the 2011 Christchurch earthquake, she believed that Mark Zuckerberg's company could make a difference — but in a good way — to social bonds, and that she could be part of that utopian project...

What internet.org involves for countries that adopt it is a Facebook-controlled monopoly of access to the internet, whereby to get online at all you have to log in to a Facebook account. When the scales fall from Wynn-Williams's eyes she realises there is nothing morally worthwhile in Zuckerberg's initiative, nothing empowering to the most deprived of global citizens, but rather his tool involves "delivering a crap version of the internet to two-thirds of the world". But Facebook's impact in the developing world proves worse than crap. In Myanmar, as Wynn-Williams recounts at the end of the book, Facebook facilitated the military junta to post hate speech, thereby fomenting sexual violence and attempted genocide of the country's Muslim minority. "Myanmar," she writes with a lapsed believer's rue, "would have been a better place if Facebook had not arrived." And what is true of Myanmar, you can't help but reflect, applies globally...

"Myanmar is where Wynn-Williams thinks the 'carelessness' of Facebook is most egregious," writes the Sunday Times: In 2018, UN human rights experts said Facebook had helped spread hate speech against Rohingya Muslims, about 25,000 of whom were slaughtered by the Burmese military and nationalists. Facebook is so ubiquitous in Myanmar, Wynn-Williams points out, that people think it is the entire internet. "It's no surprise that the worst outcome happened in the place that had the most extreme take-up of Facebook." Meta admits it was "too slow to act" on abuse in its Myanmar services....

After Wynn-Williams left Facebook, she worked on an international AI initiative, and says she wants the world to learn from the mistakes we made with social media, so that we fare better in the next technological revolution. "AI is being integrated into weapons," she explains. "We can't just blindly wander into this next era. You think social media has turned out with some issues? This is on another level."

After Meta Blocks Whistleblower's Book Promotion, It Becomes an Amazon Bestseller

Comments Filter:
  • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Sunday March 16, 2025 @03:02PM (#65238393)
    The beauty of the internet is the more you try to suppress something, the more it's known. It is also it’s greatest weakness.
  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Sunday March 16, 2025 @03:13PM (#65238401)

    That Zuckerberg and Meta will seem too evil or not evil enough -- especially given the current political climate?

  • "...Chief Negotiator for the United Nations on biosafety liability,"

    Doesn't this make her incompetent and useless?

  • Who didn't see this coming?

    • Who didn't see this coming?

      Apparently, Zuckerberg and Meta.

      I only there were something they could use to keep up on things ... :-)

  • by Old Man Kensey ( 5209 ) on Sunday March 16, 2025 @06:09PM (#65238745) Homepage
    The public statements are exactly the kind of thing some insecure executive who takes personal offense (for whatever reason, not necessarily because they're personally called out) demands be said - I've seen it from the inside of a few employers over the years. I guarantee you the people inside Facebook whose actual job is crisis communications in situations like this are pulling their hair out because they know this is the worst possible response (and are being overridden), unless they're just incompetent at their jobs.
  • ... And it's pretty obvious why Facebook /meta leadership are trying to suppress it and yet are strangely silent about their exact grievances. However morally bankrupt you thought they were, the truth is worse, much worse. It's also clear that it's going to be almost impossible for them to meaningfully refute it. The author is a trained lawyer and international diplomat, she knows what she can defend. In many cases the corroboration is already out there or available from sources beyond reproach.
  • Back in the 1900s, I would read about some hot new book and tell myself I might want to r get hold of a copy myself. But by the time I happened to be in the vicinity of a bookstore (remember those?) I had usually forgotten about the reference. Meanwhile, over the years as my vision has declined (I have AMD) I moved over to ebooks, because I can still read those easily. I'm reading more now than ever before, because getting books is so frictionless. Yesterday was an example.

    I was reading o my online Wired a

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