waffle wrote:OK doug, try this test? Knowing what you know how would YOU feel about working for that company? You'd just shrug your shoulders OR would you get the shivers?
Me, I'd get the shivers. I have personal experience with this.
Why? Because NOT what they are doing is illegal because what they are doing is IMMORAL. What is the difference between you and the management of that company? 1. Money. 2. Power (ability to change things) and 3. a lack of CARING, or MORALS.
Morals, while hard to quantify, MATTER. Frankly, they are more important than laws in our day to day interactions. Has the internet eroded laws? No. People's moral compasses? HECK YES
No offense, but what you are saying is more or less completely irrelevant to my point.
I'm not defending what facebook is doing. I'm saying you can't count on facebook or anyone else to police themselves. It may happen, but it probably won't.
Do I think Casnios are moral? Do I think the lottery is moral? how about liquor stores or bars? How about all the companies that have polluted forever in the past and didn't change until laws were put in place? How about all the monopolies that applied their power to price gauge people? How about all the phramaceutical companies doing the same thing today?
Any person could answer yes or no to any of those questions for a variety of reason, which is why as society, we figure out which morals we can agree on and put in regulations to control them rather than leaving it to the business to decide for themselves, because hint, they will decide the thing that makes them the most money is moral, and if they don't, someone will come displace them and decide that for them instead.
And note I did add LACK OF OVERSIGHT
Sure, I'm just saying you resolve this by oversight and regulation, not by hoping facebook decides to act more morally. They won't. Ever.
I mean think about it from a micro level.
When you are about to take some action what drives you? The LAWS or your MORALS? 95% of the time its morals. Don't underestimate how important they are to how we act and/or interact.
An individual has morals. A corporation, especially an extraordinarily large one beholden to shareholders with CEOs whom primarily have fiduciary responsibility to those shareholders above all else as part of their job do not.
FB's priorities were clear. Profit over all else, which, yes, I can understand, but when you KNOW have EVIDENCE (that your own company collected and chose not to make public!) that your product is having INTENSELY bad impact on the well being of Americans, especially our youth? Don't you think a little bit of that old "morals" tingle should kick in?
I don't really follow facebook, but I'd be curious to see evidence that it is having intensely bad impact and what intensely bad impact it is having. I'm not on it really nor is anyone I know, but liquor, porn, gambling all likely have plenty of evidence of intensely bad impact and exist. Again, you regulate or you outlaw, but it's not up to facebook to stop it. If you leave it up to facebook they won't.
Part of the problem is that FB is complex (heck the internet) and hard to put your finger on. The operational smarts behind it are massive and complex. FB has used this defense "oh, it's too complicated for you so we don't need to explain it" So it is hard for some people to understand the correlation between me looking at pictures of my friend's wedding and depression. But guess what! It's there and FB KNOWS IT AND PROFITS FROM IT
As noted, bars or porn or gambling are purely exploitive. There's nothing complicated there even remotely and we still allow them, and I don't know why looking at pictures of your friends wedding depresses you, but if it does, probably best not to look. Of course that's why many people stay away from social media. I only use it minimally (twitter to talk bulls) and posting here (to the extent you view this community as social media). I'm on a couple other platforms but contribute less than once a month to them.