Facebookemployees appear to have disabled sex videosreached a breaking point when it comes to Mark Zuckerberg's inaction on Donald Trump's inflammatory posts. Now they're staging a walk out.
On Monday, a group of Facebook employees organized and formally requested the day off as a form of protest. According to the New York Times, the employees created an out-of-office automated email message to make it clear they were taking a stand against Facebook’s laissez-faire approach to Trump’s recent posts.
Facebook employees also shared their criticism of the company openly on social media.
Mass demonstrations and civil unrest has spread across the country over the past week in protest of the police killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, in Minneapolis. On Friday, Trump posted a message across his social media profiles threatening those protesters with violence.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As Facebook employees are almost all working from home due to the current pandemic, the walkout is effectively a virtualprotest rather than a traditional office walk out.
The Times notes that this was just one action from a specific group with others taking a different course to let the company know their displeasure. Some employees are currently drafting a list of demands directed towards Facebook executives, while others have voiced their dissatisfaction with the company’s response. Facebook employees, both past and present, as well as those who spoke with the Times, classified the current situation at the company as the “most serious challenge to Mr. Zuckerberg’s leadership” in the Facebook's history.
“I know many people are upset that we've left the President's posts up, but our position is that we should enable as much expression as possible unless it will cause imminent risk of specific harms or dangers spelled out in clear policies,” wroteMark Zuckerberg in a Facebook post last week explaining why it hadn’t taken action on Trump’s post.
Trump's controversial message in question was posted to both his Facebook and Twitter accounts.
“Just spoke to Governor Tim Walz and told him that the Military is with him all the way,” wrote Trump in a post which referred to the protesters as “thugs.”
“Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” continued Trump.
Twitter classifiedTrump’s post as glorifying violence, which is against the platform’s policies. While it didn’t completely remove the post from its service, it put a label on it forcing users to click a prompt to view the tweet.
Trump immediately criticized Twitter for its decision to warn users about the tweet. The move promptedTrump to threaten to “close” social media platforms. With Twitter firmly engaged in a policy war with the President of the United States over his tweets, attention quickly turned to Facebook's response.
“Unlike Twitter, we do not have a policy of putting a warning in front of posts that may incite violence because we believe that if a post incites violence, it should be removed regardless of whether it is newsworthy, even if it comes from a politician,” wrote Zuckerberg.
Clearly, Facebook’s response did not please many of its employees.
The social media giant’s political problems have been simmering for some time now. Facebook infamously rolled outnew rules last year which essentially allowed free rein for politicians to lie about most issues on its social media platforms while everyone else gets fact-checked. Employees have also pushed backon the company’s decision.
Facebook has been criticizedin the past for its lack of workplace diversity and has been accused specifically by a former employee of “failing its Black employees and its Black users.”
Public criticism and a mass request for time off may not seem like the most extreme measure, but for Facebook employees, it's a start. As Trump continues to push the boundaries of what's acceptable for an elected official, the company's decisions could create even more discontent within its ranks.
Facebook executives should very well heed this warning.
Topics Facebook Social Media Donald Trump
23andMe data breach settlement could give up to $10K to victimsBest gaming laptop deal: Save over $100 on Logitech G915 TKLWhy is TikTok obsessed with the winter arc?NYT Strands hints, answers for October 15Surfshark launches Data Leak Checker toolBest gaming laptop deal: Save over $100 on Logitech G915 TKLGoogle is going nuclear for AIBest Amazon deals of the day: Samsung Galaxy Watch 6, Galaxy Ring, AeroGarden Harvest, and moreBest Grubhub promo code: Prime members can save 20%Fall is the most overrated seasonBest MagSafe charger deal: Get the 25W MagSafe charger for just $29 at Amazon.Tesla's Optimus robots at 'We, Robot' event were not very autonomousGoogle's Android 15 is here, and it's all about security and privacyWhy is TikTok obsessed with the winter arc?Siri Dahl hosts 'Corn Telethon' to raise awareness against Project 2025How to unblock Xnxx for freeElon Musk didn't invent fake tech demosGet 'EA Sports College Football 25' for $42.99 at WalmartBest fitness tech deal: Get a Samsung Galaxy Ring for as low as $328 at AmazonBest Apple Pencil Pro deal: Save $39 Tinder cancels apocalyptic show's global debut due to coronavirus That video of isolated Italians singing Rihanna is fake, sorry Michelle Yeoh's Oscar win stokes conversations on Asian identity and representation NBA's Kevin Love donates $100,000 to Cavaliers staff over coronavirus OpenAI GPT What the coronavirus has done to the porn industry — so far Reminder: You don't have to watch 'Contagion' TikTok announces STEM feed in celebration of Pi Day Ohio will close all its bars and restaurants to slow down coronavirus Spotify's TikTok TikTok to be banned from UK government devices How Italy is fighting its coronavirus isolation with music Inside the red zone: Photos show dramatic impact of Italy's coronavirus lockdown Hand sanitizer and coronavirus: Not all of it will work Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson test positive for coronavirus The pitfalls of being Too Online during the coronavirus Oscars 2023: The Best Original Song musical performances There's more to 'Naatu Naatu' at the Oscars than you think Watch Pedro Pascal and Bella Ramsey crack up in 'The Last of Us' blooper 'Black Panther' costume designer Ruth E. Carter made history at the Oscars
2.3292s , 10520.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【disabled sex videos】,Feast Information Network