The congress should “remove the hammer” in Meta after the bombing whistle accusations of the scandalous lengths that Mark Zuckerberg took to get his intact applications in China – including the capture of Beijing’s dissident, according to Watchdogs Tech.
Sarah Wynn-Williams, a former director of the Global Facebook policy who worked on China’s issues on social media giant, filed a complaint to Whistlebower with SEC in April, the Washington Post reported. She has also detailed her supposedly toxic experiences in a memory entitled “Careless People”.
On Wednesday, Meta won an urgent decision from an arbitrator that ordered Wynn-Williams to stop promoting explosive memories-also claiming that the former Coco Sheryl Sandberg once spent $ 13,000 in the interior for herself and a new female assistant and later invited Wynn-Williams to “Come to bed” during a long-standing house.
According to Wynn-Williams, Facebook was so desperate to raise revenue by entering China’s lucrative market that it took extreme steps to do favor with the Chinese Communist Party, which has long implemented a so-called “excellent firewall” that blocks most American social media applications.
Attempts to enter the good CCP graces included the construction of a “censorship system” in 2015 that would allow Beijing to block certain words and content and limit an account in 2017 operated by Guo Wengui, a self-sacrificing Chinese billionaire, according to the whistle complaint.
“These discoveries are indicative of a company whose values are essentially rotten – and that goes to the top,” said Sacha Haworth, Executive Director of the Technology Supervisory Project for The Post.
“Zuckerberg and Meta’s rotating doctors claim to have given up Chinese investment, but Meta receives $ 1 billion a month from China,” Haworth added. “Meta has tried again and time again that they are ready to throw us US security under the bus, and it’s time for Congress to remove the hammer.”
While Facebook and Instagram are banned in China, Meta still collects billions of dollars every year from Chinese companies buying ads on platforms to reach American clients. Chinese e -commerce giant Temu was the only largest Meta advertiser in 2023, buying nearly $ 2 billion in advertising, Wall Street Journal reported.
In total, China -based firms accounted for 10% or $ 13.69 billion in 2023 fiscal income. China Windfall increased the increase in short income by 5 percentage points, according to Meta CFO Susan Li.
Mike Davis, a close ally of President Trump, and the founder of the Article III project, said that “the latest discoveries about Meta’s efforts to calm the Chinese government come as a surprise to Americans who have centered the conservatives and routinely deceive Congress.”
A campaign to build specific versions of China of Meta applications were recognized internally as the “Aldrin Project”-a reference to Buzz Aldrin, one of the first astronauts walking on the moon.
“Meta and its ILK prioritize human rights profits, cooperating with authoritarian regimes to suppress free speech and undermine democracy,” Davis added. “Their actions require examination of the Congress and the strongest implementation of the law.
“By disrupting large technology monopolies, we can make sure they no longer have an disproportionate impact on the global economy, politics, speech and society.”
Meta said that Wynn-Williams, who left Facebook in 2017 after six years, was fired for “poor performance and toxic behavior” and called her memory “false and slander”.
According to Wynn-Williams complaint, Guo’s account occurred after Zhao Zeliang, a senior Chinese internet regulator, told the company officials that the implementation of restrictions would show Facebook’s readiness to “address mutual interests”.
In October 2017, Facebook said that he took action against Guo – described by Reuters at the time as “escaping from China’s high profile” – and limited his ability to post because an account of it had shared “identifier information” contrary to its policies.
A Meta spokesman said the information unjustly shared in the Guo account included passport numbers, social security numbers and home addresses.
Months ago in April 2017, Meta briefly suspended Guo’s account about the same time that the Chinese billionaire had made allegations of corruption involving the families of senior CCP officials. Meta said the suspension was a mistake and returned it.
Guo later ended up in hot water in the SH.BA after being sentenced to nine charges of deceiving online followers by $ 1 billion. He faces decades in prison.
Details included in Wynn-Williams complaint in seemingly opposite November 2017 during a session of the Intel Senate Committee when then-Sen. Marco Rubio asked the General Advisor General of the then Phase Colin Stretch.
Internal notes from a Facebook meeting at the time showed officials who worried about the directive: “If there is nothing we can do [about Guo’s account]It will have an impact on our cooperation, “according to the complaint.
However, during the 2017 hearing, Rubio, who is now serving as Trump’s Secretary of State, asked directly if Facebook had received “any pressure from the Chinese government” to block Guo’s account. Stretch said no.
“We received a report from Chinese government representatives for the account,” Stretch said at the time. “We analyzed that report like we would make some other and have taken actions only based on our policies.”
In her book, Wynn-Williams said that Facebook considered Caving in 2014 in China’s request to share the personal data of Chinese users, including Hong Kong residents with Chinese government.
As part of the Friendship of the Endeavor, Zuckerberg wrote a blur for a book written by Chinese leader Xi Jinping and displayed a copy of the book on his table during a visit from the then head of the CCP propaganda department, Lu Wei.
Meta abolished her attempt to enter the Chinese market in 2019 after the economic and political tensions between the US and China escalated during Trump’s first term. Around the same time, Zuckerberg also increased his criticism of censorship from China -owned Tiktok.
A Meta spokesman said the allegations were “all driven by an employee completed eight years ago for poor performance.
“We do not operate our services today in China,” the spokesman said. “It’s no secret that we were once interested in doing so as part of Facebook’s effort to connect the world. This was widely reported starting a decade ago. After all we have chosen not to pass with the ideas we would explore, which Mark Zuckerberg announced in 2019.”
After years of clash with Trump, Zuckerberg has recently tried to improve fences by participating in the inauguration of the President in January and Nixing Dei and the facts of facts that had attracted Trump’s internal circle noise.
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