Adam Mosseri isn't doing Facebook any favors.
The Detective Archiveshead of Instagram was interviewed on the Recode Media podcast this week following a damning series of articles in the Wall Street Journalbased on leaked internal Facebook documents. In the interview with host Peter Kafka, Mosseri attempted to defend the negative effects his platform has on its users by comparing social media to cars. The gist of his argument? Some people are just going to get run over, and that's the price we all pay.
"We know that more people die than would otherwise because of car accidents, but by and large cars create way more value in the world than they destroy," argued Mosseri. "And I think social media is similar."
The Journalstory in question explains how internal Facebook research (Facebook owns Instagram) found Instagram was making life worse for a segment of its users.
"We make body image issues worse for one in three teen girls," read one 2019 internal slide obtained by the paper. "Teens blame Instagram for increases in the rate of anxiety and depression," read another.
In response to Mosseri's car comments, Kafka rightly pointed out that automobiles are subject to intense safety regulation on a federal level, which Mosseri countered by pivoting between saying social media regulation is welcome and, well, that it's also potentially problematic.
"We think you have to be careful," he said, "because regulation can cause more problems."
Kafka was not the only one to see and highlight the inconsistency in Mosseri's defense. Many on Twitter were quick to point out that Mosseri had come up empty when grasping at straws.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Mosseri's analogy involving fatal car crashes may have been a little too on the nose. The Facebook research reported by the Journalfound that, as the paper put it, "Among teens who reported suicidal thoughts, 13% of British users and 6% of American users traced the desire to kill themselves to Instagram, one presentation showed."
While Mosseri's framing of social media as an ultimate societal benefit that just so happens to have some rather nasty negative externalities may come as a shock to some listeners of the Recode Media podcast, it follows in a long line of outlandish self-justification done by Facebook executives.
In 2018, BuzzFeed News published a memo written by then Facebook VP Andrew Bosworth (Bosworth has since managed to fail up to the head of Facebook's Reality Labs, the division behind the privacy disaster in waiting that is Facebook's camera glasses). The 2016 document painted a damning picture of a company dead set on ignoring the real-world consequences of its services.
The memo argued that Facebook's purpose was to connect people, and sure people might die as a result, and that would be bad, but that wouldn't slow the company down.
SEE ALSO: Facebook shut down political ad research, daring authorities to pursue regulation
"Maybe it costs a life by exposing someone to bullies," wrote Bosworth. "Maybe someone dies in a terrorist attack coordinated on our tools. And still we connect people."
It sounds like Mosseri and Bosworth have a lot to talk about. Too bad for the rest of us that the men's collected influence on the lives of billions means we'll all be forced to listen.
Topics Facebook Instagram Social Media
'Infinity War' director confirms: No Adam Warlock in 'Avengers 4'Adele threw an opulent 'Titanic' themed party for her 30th birthday'Guardians' director reveals more details on Groot in 'Infinity War'Lava from Hawaii's Kilauea volcano spews into a neighborhoodThe 10 best 3D printers for beginners'Guardians' director reveals more details on Groot in 'Infinity War'Lego and Amazon Alexa launch roleplaying Echo game for young buildersNintendo Online brings save backFacebook's 'M' assistant might actually have a nameYou might not like this botanist's detailed explanation of Baby Groot's biologyWhat to expect at Google I/O: Android P, Google Assistant, lots of AIEcoflow releases River Bank, world's most powerful charging stationCéline Dion has a restraining order against Deadpool in this behind'Tully' writer Diablo Cody talks women in film, on screen and offHere's how Amazon Alexa will work with Microsoft CortanaPeople don't totally love the 'Westworld' India parkDear Facebook: Please let me make my Facebook Spaces VR avatar fatFBI agents swarmed with drones during a hostage rescue operation'Destiny 2' expansion 'Warmind' and update 1.2.0, explainedWindows 10 is getting a great new screenshot tool Chromecast with Google TV is 33% off at Amazon Tencent launches Hunyuan large language model · TechNode Reckless EPA news release distorts the new, grim U.S. Climate Report How to transfer iPhone to iPhone SpaceX blasts Es’hail Supermarket ad banned for being too 'political' becomes an online hit Tesla Model 3 Performance is here. Here are 5 things that make it great, and 3 drawbacks. Best PlayStation deal: 'Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order' is on sale for $4.99 — 90% off Amazon deals of the day: Roborock S8 Pro Ultra, GE Profile nugget ice maker, and more Best laptop deal: Get the Samsung Galaxy Book3 Pro for $800 off Renault to cut costs amid competition with Chinese counterparts · TechNode Chinese EV leaders call for global cooperation and standardized policies · TechNode Ant Group unveils finance Hinge Hidden Words allows you to filter out words and emojis 'The Circle' Season 6's AI contestant is a grim reminder of the ubiquity of chatbots Trip.com saw 180% revenue growth in Q2 amid China travel recovery · TechNode SRH vs. RCB 2024 live stream: Watch IPL for free Huawei sues Portugal cybersecurity council over ban on 5G equipment supply · TechNode Xiaomi in EV pilot production, may obtain ministry approval within months · TechNode Customizable Dyson Airwrap is $100 off in April 2024
2.8875s , 10130.0703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Detective Archives】,Information Information Network