Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by fpisfun 3112 days ago
It's hard to imagine a less ethical company in silicon valley than Facebook so it's not surprising
3 comments

A little OT, but I think public perception really muddies this a lot.

To expand on the siblings' example of Uber, the public seems to mostly think Uber=unethical & Lyft=ethical, but really, they engage in many of the same business practices. Uber has a worse reputation because of their sexual harassment scandals and outspoken douchebag former CEO. Lyft tries to brand themselves as the hippie-dippy summer-of-love sharing company, and has done pretty well at maintaining that image. I don't doubt that Lyft is a much better place to work (for employees, not drivers), and I just had to look up their CEO's name because he isn't the raging asshole that Kalanick seems to be and isn't in the news all the time... but that doesn't maybe Lyft the innocent darling many people think they are, especially when it's so easy to compare them favorably against Uber.

So it's easy to demonize Facebook for being "the most unethical", because they're often front-and-center not just in the news, but also in people's daily lives. But consider other companies, like Uber (and Lyft!), Palantir (fuels the surveillance state), Theranos (fraudulent claims about the efficacy of "new" medical lab test procedures), Hampton Creek (had its employees buy their product from stores to pump up sales numbers), and Zenefits (built software that allowed employees to dodge state licensing requirements).

As much as I love Silicon Valley and couldn't imagine working anywhere else, there's also a lot of corruption and unethical behavior here.

It’s not corruption if you call it disruptive!
Or social!
Uber?
Well what a coincidence to see your post identical to mine. I haven't refreshed the page within the time span of you posting so I thought I was the first haha.
While I agree that Uber has established itself as "the most unethical tech-company of our time", the difference is that Facebook's business model is kind of unethical - hoarding of personal data on its users to sell to advertisers. While Uber's business model is merely providing people with utility.
Uber's in SF. :P
They provide a useful service though at least
You are really arrogant to believe Facebook is not useful to anybody.
Uber?