Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism
Sarah Wynn-Williams. Flatiron, $32.99 (400p) ISBN 978-1-250-39123-0
Meta is a cesspool of petty tyranny and moral callousness, according to this explosive tell-all. Wynn-Williams recaps her seven years as Facebook’s manager of global public policy, which entailed dealing with foreign governments on censorship, regulation, and other hot-button issues, as well as ensuring executives didn’t make fools of themselves on the world stage (she once scrambled to prevent CEO Mark Zuckerberg from following Big Bird at the Global Citizen Festival). More seriously, Wynn-Williams describes how her idealistic enthusiasm for connecting the world soured as she witnessed the company collaborate with the 2016 Trump campaign to target users with political ads; bow to the Chinese Communist Party’s demands to censor criticism; and refuse to take action when Myanmar’s military used Facebook to spread disinformation that fueled the ethnic cleansing of the country’s Rohingya minority. She hangs a witty picaresque of Facebook life around colorful profiles of its executives—Zuckerberg is “smaller, paler, and... angrier than I anticipated”—while taking aim at rampant overwork and sexual harassment at the company, claiming that she was forced by former COO Sheryl Sandberg to draw up talking points for a meeting while in labor with her first child and was fired after complaining about her boss Joel Kaplan’s sexually charged comments. The result is a withering takedown of Facebook’s hypocrisy. (Mar.)
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Reviewed on: 03/28/2025
Genre: Nonfiction