The book Careless People was written by Sarah Wynn-Williams.
- Chapter 1 starts with her recounting a shark attack at age 13.
- Early at her work, she was expected to send a mail pushing to start a Facebook organ donor flag as a life event, for a director's pet-project
- She saw Hillary Clinton at a Salsa bar in Columbia
- Sheryl Sandberg used Facebook employees to sell her book - seems unsavory but not illegal
- Korean law requires games to be submitted and reviewed, Facebook ignored this so their government issued arrest warrants for several managers including Mark. Before a trip there, they sent someone as a test
- A quote from her experience on a trip to Asia - I didn't anticipate the only request he (Mark Zuckerberg) makes: a riot. To be precise, his exact request is for a riot or a peace rally … I'm surprised when we come to a stop outside a shopping mall because the president-elect's team had said the blusukan would take place at a nearby slum. We all jump out and try to locate Jokowi and Mark. Within moments we're overtaken by people
- Privacy vs access Facebook would leverage Hong Kong users' data as part of a deal to get into China
- Concerning a conference in Davos: ‘'the point when I realize that Facebook's meetings with politicians are changing is when I see that Cameron and Osborne (British) don't want to confront Joel and Sheryl about any regulatory issues. What they want to talk about - and ultimately request - is Facebooks's support against the Brexit vote.''
- In reference to the 2016 US presidential election: ‘'Facebook embedded staff in Trump's campaign team in San Antonio for months, alongside Trump campaign programmers, ad copywriters, media buyers, network engineers, and data scientists. A Trump operative named Brad Parscale ran operation together with embedded Facebook staff''
- A mention of how an open office plan reduces sexual harassment lawsuits
- Near the end of the book she lists out lies that Facebook executives have made in front of congress - unaware of any accountability
There is also a review from Lawfare here.