After the year Mark Zuckerbergâs had, youâd think heâd struggle to appear so chipper.
âIâm proud of the progress weâve made,â he said in an end-of-year note posted on his Facebook page for everyone to see. Acknowledging that the social network played its part in the spread of hate speech, election interference and misinformation, Zuckerbergâs note seemed more upbeat about his response to the hurricane of hurt caused by the companyâs laissez-faire attitude to world affairs and less concerned about showing contrition and empathy for the harm Facebook caused in the past year â including its inability to keep its usersâ data safe and, above all else, its failure to prevent its site from being used to incite ethnic violence and genocide.
Zuckerbergâs tone-deaf remarks read like 1,000 words of patting himself on the back.
But where the Facebook co-founder pledged to âfocus on addressing some of the most important issues facing our community,â he conveniently ignored some of the most damaging, ongoing problems that the company has shown little desire to solve, opting instead for quick fixes or simply pretending they donât exist.
âMore than 30,000 people working on safetyâŠâ isnât enough to police the platform
A decade ago, Facebook had just 12 people moderating its entire site â some 120 million users. Now, the company relies largely on an army of underpaid contractors spread out across the world to moderate millions of potentially rule-breaking posts on the site each week.
Zuckerberg said the company has this year increased those working on safety to âmore than 30,000 people.â Thatâs on top of the 33,600 full-time employees that Facebook had as of the end of September. But thatâs a massive task to police Facebookâs 2.27 billion monthly active users. Those 30,000 new safety contractors equates to about one moderator for every 75,660 users.
Facebookâs contractors have long complained about long hours and low pay, and thatâs not even taking into account the thousands of gruesome posts â from beheadings to child abuse and exploitation â they have to review each day. Turnover is understandably high. No other social network in the world has as many users as Facebook, and itâs impossible to know what the âright numberâ of moderators is.
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But the numbers donât add up. Facebookâs army of 30,000 safety staffers isnât enough to combat the onslaught of vitriol and violence, let alone against an advanced adversary like the nation-state actors that itâs constantly blaming.
Facebook lost its chief security officer this year â and doesnât want a replacement
Zuckerberg made no mention of the photo data exposure and account breaches that the company had to contend with this year, even if he couldnât avoid mentioning Cambridge Analytica, the voter research firm that misused 87 million Facebook usersâ information, just the once.
Yet, Zuckerberg made no commitment to doubling down on the companyâs efforts to secure the platform, despite years of its âmove fast and break thingsâ mentality. Since the departure of former chief security officer Alex Stamos in August, the company hasnât hired his replacement. All signs point to nobody taking the position at all. While many see a chief security officer as a figurehead-type position, they still provide executive-level insight into the threats they face and issues to handle â no more than ever after a string of embarrassing and damaging security incidents.
Zuckerberg said that the company invests âbillions of dollars in security yearly.â That may be true. But without an executive overseeing that budget, itâs not confidence-inducing knowing that thereâs nobody with the years of experience needed to oversee a companyâs security posture in control of where those billions go.
Former Facebook security chief Alex Stamos: Being a CSO can be a âcrappy jobâ
There was no acknowledgement of Facebookâs role in Myanmarâs genocide
Fake news, misinformation and election meddling is one thing, but Zuckerberg refused to acknowledge the direct impact Facebook had on Myanmarâs ethnic violence â which the United Nations is calling genocide.
It canât be much of a surprise to Zuckerberg. The UN said Facebook had a âdetermining roleâ in inciting genocide in the country. He faced questions directly from U.S. lawmakers earlier this year when he was told to testify to senators in April. Journalists are regularly arrested and murdered for reporting on the military-backed governmentâs activities. The Facebook boss apologized â which human rights groups on the ground called âgrossly insufficient.â
Facebook said last week that it has purged hundreds of accounts, pages and groups associated with inciting violence in Myanmar, but continues to refuse setting up an office in the country â despite groups on the ground saying would be necessary to show itâs serious about the region.
Facebook is not equipped to stop the spread of authoritarianism
âThat doesnât mean⊠people wonât find more examples of past mistakes before we improved our systems.â
Zuckerberg said in his note that the company âdidnât focus as much on these issues as we needed to, but weâre now much more proactive.â
âThat doesnât mean weâll catch every bad actor or piece of bad content, or that people wonât find more examples of past mistakes before we improved our systems,â he said. Some have seen that as a hint that some of the worst revelations are yet to come. Perhaps itâs just Zuckerberg hedging his bets as a way to indemnify his remarks from criticism when the next inevitable bad news break hits the wires.
In his 1,000-word post, Zuckerberg said he was âproudâ three times, he talked of the companyâs âfocusâ four times and how much âprogressâ was being made five times. But there wasnât a single âsorryâ to be seen. Then again, heâs spent most of his Facebook career apologizing for the companyâs fails. Any more at this point would probably come across as trite.
Zuckerberg ended on as much as a cheery note as he began, looking to the new year as an opportunity for âbuilding community and bringing people together,â adding: âHereâs to a great new year to come.â
Well, it canât be much worse than this year. Or can it?