Careless Facebook

I’m reading this wonderful piece from Cory Doctorow, Pluralistic: Sarah Wynn-Williams’s ‘Careless People’ (23 Apr 2025)

Facebook captures its regulators, freeing it from regulatory consequences for its bad acts. By playing a central role in the electoral campaigns of Obama and then other politicians around the world, Facebook transforms its watchdogs into supplicants who are more apt to beg it for favors than hold it to account.

Facebook tames its employees, freeing it from labor consequences for its bad acts. As engineering supply catches up with demand, Facebook’s leadership come to realize that they don’t have to worry about workforce uprisings, whether incited by impunity for sexually abusive bosses, or by the company’s complicity in genocide and autocratic oppression.

First, Facebook becomes too big to fail.

Then, Facebook becomes too big to jail.

Finally, Facebook becomes too big to care.

Facebook bosses aren’t just “careless” because they refuse to read a briefing note that’s longer than a tweet. They’re “careless” in the sense that they arrive at a juncture where they don’t have to care who they harm, whom they enrage, who they ruin.


And this piece — Even if you’re paying for the product, you’re still the product — is also worth reading.

Facebook, in other words, isn’t just lying to the public about what it offers to advertisers — it’s lying to advertisers, too. Contra those who say, “if you’re not paying for the product, you’re the product,” Facebook treats anyone it can get away with abusing as “the product” (just like every other tech monopolist)