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Facebook Has Fired Multiple Employees for Snooping on Users: Motherboard (vice.com)

Joseph Cox and Max Hoppenstedt, reporting for Motherboard: On Tuesday, Facebook fired an employee who had allegedly used their privileged data access to stalk women online. Now, multiple former Facebook employees and people familiar with the company describe to Motherboard parts of the social media giant's data access policies. This includes how those in the security team, which the fired employee was allegedly a part of, have less oversight on their access than others. The news emphasizes something that typical users may forget when scrolling through a Silicon Valley company's service or site: although safeguards against abuse may be in place, there are people who have the power to see information you believe to be private, and sometimes they may look at that data.

Motherboard granted the sources in this story anonymity to speak more candidly about Facebook's policies and procedures. One source specifically mentioned Facebook's strict non-disclosure agreement. One former Facebook worker said when they joined the company multiple people had been terminated for abusing access to user data, including for stalking exes. Another former Facebook employee said that they know of three cases where people were fired because they mishandled data, one of which included stalking. Typically, these incidents are not publicly reported.

1 of 35 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Nothing new. by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The skeptical part of me thinks that we're only hearing about this now because, as much as Facebook wouldn't like it to be known that their employees have been pulling this kind of shit all throughout the company's history, they'd rather have us talking about this than the other ways your data has been and is being abused by the company. From how Facebook has behaved, perhaps the only crime that these employees committed in Facebook's eyes was a failure to pay Facebook's going rate for access.