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by vidarh
3569 days ago
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Exactly because they can make more money by avoiding controversy there is every reason to be outraged and make it known - it is the one channel we have to make it worth it for them to listen and consider changing their policies, by making it costly for them to ignore it. > But until people are willing to get upset enough about issues like this to leave Facebook, they really have no incentive to change. They will have an incentive to change if e.g. advertisers start worrying about their image if they advertise on Facebook too. Causing outrage and creating a debate around whether Facebook is damaging our society is a way of making Facebook a less attractive advertising channel as well. |
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