Absolutely brilliant! Just start with all of the articles citing direct actions on his part. I'm sure the compilation would end any speculation as to the nature of his character, if there ever was any.
What would that accomplish? Please spend the time you could be slandering a persona everyone loves to hate doing something more meaningful with your life.
No one ever claimed that Zuck is Zuck because he's a good guy; Zuck is Zuck because he's CEO of Facebook.
Slander: a malicious, false, and defamatory statement or report.
Since when did calling someone on their verifiable actions become slander? When America becomes complacent to the lack of moral and ethical accountability of our CEOs and business leaders, the end cannot be far away.
We must expect and demand a certain level of trust from the people who safeguard our personal information. The possibilities offered within the concept of "the cloud" will never come to fruition without this essential component.
What if your bank decided to publish the activity on your accounts?
> What if your bank decided to publish the activity on your accounts?
As something of an advocate for privacy and data protection, I have found it instructive to compare the recent behaviour at Facebook and Google with that of Mint, whose entire business basically depends on people trusting them with access codes to their bank accounts.
"Simply put, we do not and will not sell or rent your personal information to anyone, for any reason, at any time."
(For the avoidance of doubt, I am in no way connected with Mint, Intuit or any related organisation. I'm just an interested observer of how privacy and security are handled by on-line businesses, and found them a useful example.)
Out of curiosity - did facebook have a similar policy and then go about changing it? They also note they post changes on their website, but it does not need to be on the front page, or other high traffic area.
I have seen this service before and really like it, however I just can't trust them with my bank info.
Here's a great infographic (http://mattmckeon.com/facebook-privacy/) highlighting Facebook's changes to their default policies regarding the stuff the general public can view on your profile.
The trick they are pulling is to default "yes" for you when they update the policies. You are then forced to go through the labyrinth of settings to change everything back. Clever, no?
No one ever claimed that Zuck is Zuck because he's a good guy; Zuck is Zuck because he's CEO of Facebook.