Facebook has a problem with black people, former employee charges

Former Facebook employee Mark Luckie says the company disenfranchises black people on the platform and inside the company.

This conversation is moderated according to USA TODAY's community rules.

That's the assessment of Mark Luckie, a former employee who says racial discrimination is real, both on the company's Silicon Valley campus and on the social media giant's platform.

A Facebook post he shared withmanagement andemployees earlier this month and released publicly on Tuesday exposes racial fault lines that Luckie says should be a matter of grave public alarm, with the lack of representation and agency of black people inside Facebook directly affectinghow black people on Facebook are treated.

Blacksand Latinoshave long been excluded from major tech companiesin Silicon Valley, even as recognition grows that thelack of diversity undercutsthe ability of companies to build technology that appeals to a broad cross-section ofconsumers. Tech workers, who have historically been reluctant to publicly criticize their employers, have begun speaking out morethis year, hoping to rattle the status quo.

In an emailed statement, Facebook spokesman Anthony Harrison said the company is working to increase the range of perspectives of those who build its products.

Facebookhas struggled for years to reverse hiring patterns that excluded underrepresented minorities and to create a corporate culture that welcomes them.

At the same time, the lack of diversity in its workforce has translated into problems with the black community, which hashigh rates of engagement on Facebook.

Facebook's highest-ranking black executive, Ime Archibong, responded to Luckie on Twitter after Luckie posteda privatemessage exchange between them in which Archibong took him to task for sharing his Facebook post with the entire company.

Original article
Author: Usatoday

USA TODAY delivers current local and national news, sports, entertainment, finance, technology, and more through award-winning journalism, photos, videos and VR.

Usatoday has recently written 10 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Despite escalating pressure ahead of the 2020 election, Facebook reaffirmed its freewheeling policy on political ads Thursday, saying it wont ban them, wont fact-check them and wont limit how they can be targeted to specific groups of people. (Jan". (January 10, 2020)
  2. "After a server change took Facebook and Instagram down for many for most of Wednesday, Apple's iCloud faced its own share of issues Thursday". (March 15, 2019)
  3. "Instagram and Facebook apps were down for several hours for some users in the United States and Europe Wednesday. WhatsApp users also seeing issues". (July 4, 2019)
  4. "The social media giant said it has resolved the issue, which affected millions of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp users starting Wednesday". (March 14, 2019)
  5. "Facebook announced that it's working to integrate the three major chat platforms — Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp, as it pivots to privacy-first". (March 6, 2019)
  6. "Japan's Emperor Akihito abdicates, Mark Zuckerberg addresses Facebook's future and more of Tuesday's news to know". (April 30, 2019)
  7. "“Curious if there are any talks of striking". (February 20, 2019)
  8. "The #VansChallenge might have you believing the popular shoes have cat-like reflexes". (March 4, 2019)
  9. "Facebook settled five lawsuits alleging its targeting tools allowed advertisers to exclude certain groups from seeing housing and employment offers". (March 19, 2019)
  10. "The move to ban white nationalist and white separatist content on Facebook and Instagram marks a major step in reckoning with white supremacist content". (March 27, 2019)
Posted on  , ,