Mark Zuckerberg “asks” if we will delete Facebook on the cover of Time

With an inspirational cover, Time magazine comments on Facebook Wall Street Journal reveals internal documents which demonstrated the extremely negative effect that Instagram in the mental health of children and adolescents.

The cover of the magazine depicts its founder Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, with his mouth hidden by an icon with the following question: “Do you want to delete Facebook?” with the “Delete” and “Cancel” options.

The inspiration for the cover is the former Facebook product manager, Francis Haugen, who leaked the documents to the Wall Street Journal and is now a public witness, as it accuses the group of putting “profit above safety” of users.

The text that accompanies the photo gives a taste of the struggle that people made to change the culture of the social networking medium so that it is based on the human being, putting him above dangerous algorithms.

The caption of the photo states: “Five years ago, Roger McNamee embarked on a mission to help Facebook change its culture, business model and algorithms. “I was involved with the company in its early days as a consultant and investor. Since then, I and countless others have pushed Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and CEO Sheryl Sandberg to reform Facebook. I communicated with them privately. I spoke in public. I wrote about TIME in 2019, urging Facebook and Silicon Valley to adopt human-based technology over addictive, dangerous algorithms. Nothing happened.

“The last three weeks have changed the game,” he wrote. “Facebook’s courageous complainant, Frances Haugen, changed the talk of technological reform, achieving more than I and others have achieved in many years. Documents provided to the Wall Street Journal confirmed that the damage from Facebook was the inevitable result of a dangerous plan.

In many cases, the documents show that Facebook chose to double despite being aware of the damage it caused and pushing for change. It is clear that policymakers and the media have consistently underestimated the threat posed by Facebook, believing the company’s rosy claims about the power of global connectivity. “Facebook will not be fixed.”

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