whistleblower
Washington (AFP) - Being a whistleblower comes down to careful preparation but also an eye trained for dirty tricks, said Ifeoma Ozoma, an ex-employee of several Silicon Valley giants turned revealer of tech world wrongdoing. "I planned it like a program or product launch. Obviously the experience is something very personal, but I approached it like work," she told AFP. While Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen has become a figurehead for the fight against social media's faults, there are others in the tech world, like Ozoma, who have also taken big risks to stand up. An African-American, f...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - Ex-Facebook worker Frances Haugen strode on stage to roaring applause in Portugal, the latest step in a trajectory that has diverged sharply from that of other high-profile whistleblowers who wound up in exile or ruin. Haugen's leak of company records has benefited from well-oiled communications machinery, powerful backers and a lucky crypto currency bet -- even if it's far from certain whether she will induce her stated goal: to reform Facebook. The internal reports captured by her smartphone camera and handed to journalists have already resulted in a deluge of damning stor...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - Facebook's previous major scandals barely dented its global dominance, but experts said Wednesday the tech giant may have hit a red line this time: evidence that it knew children using its apps were at risk of being harmed. A day after damning testimony to US lawmakers from Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen, the long-established barriers to regulation -- stalled legislation, free speech protections and tech's rapid advances -- were still in place. But an insider with the company's own documents, showing that Facebook knew its tools risked worsening young people's eating ...
AFP
Washington (AFP) - Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen offered deep insight Tuesday into how the social media giant works and how it could be fixed. From an insular culture to harm to teens' body image, Haugen told US senators what she saw inside the company. Here are some highlights of her testimony: Frankenstein Facebook"If you split Facebook and Instagram apart, it's likely that most advertising dollars will go to Instagram and Facebook will continue to be this Frankenstein... that is endangering lives around the world... these systems are going to continue to exist and be dangerous even ...
AFP
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