I am ashamed of the ad policy decisions that Facebook has made lately, notably allowing misleading and false political ads. All previous scandals could be attributed to incompetence rather than malice, but nothing has been so egregiously asserted.
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I am struggling to reconcile my feelings into something constructive, but many have asked me to be more vocal, and I feel I have an obligation to be. Speaking out publicly is the first step, although it is still the bare minimum.
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If you're a Facebook employee on Twitter then you shouldn't be ashamed to express your opinion (whether you agree or oppose). Yes, silence is an implicit approval.
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Replying to @sebmck
You shouldn't assume that people who are silent are necessarily approving. For some people, disagreeing might mean the end of their livelihoods. Not everyone is in the privileged position of being able to voice their opinion without consequence.
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Sebastian Retweeted Sebastian
Did some clarifying tweets. Intention is not the same as perception.https://twitter.com/sebmck/status/1190329309216440320 …
Sebastian added,
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he/him 