One survey per day. Since Monday, the
Wall Street Journal has
multiplied the revelations on Facebook. A whistleblower sent the American newspaper a series of internal and confidential documents which, put together, show that the group is fully aware of the problems caused by its galaxy of applications. Alerts come up from the teams, extensive research is being carried out by researchers employed by the American titan. Encrypted presentations are shared within the group. The most problematic elements go up in the hierarchy, sometimes up to Mark Zuckerberg himself. And yet. Each of the investigations carried out by the
Wall Street Journal
shows that almost nothing changes.
This can be for fear of lowering engagement, a key metric for the group, or for fear that a change will hurt its economic activities.
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It could also be because Facebook, a social network used by nearly 3 billion people
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