Careless People

A story of where I used to work

400 pages

English language

Published 2025 by Macmillan.

ISBN:
978-1-0350-6592-9
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4 stars (6 reviews)

Sarah Wynn-Williams, a young diplomat from New Zealand, pitched for her dream job. She saw Facebook’s potential and knew it could change the world for the better. But, when she got there and rose to its top ranks, things turned out a little different.

From wild schemes cooked up on private jets to risking prison abroad, Careless People exposes both the personal and political fallout when boundless power and a rotten culture take hold. In a gripping and often absurd narrative, Wynn-Williams rubs shoulders with Mark Zuckerberg, Sheryl Sandberg and world leaders, revealing what really goes on among the global elite – and the consequences this has for all of us.

Candid and entertaining, this is an intimate memoir set amid powerful forces. As all our lives are upended by technology and those who control it, Careless People will change how you see the world.

5 editions

Careless People

No rating

There are no big reveals in this book for anyone who is well informed and critical of big tech, but I guess it's good that someone documented details about how hypocritical Sheryl Sandberg is with her white feminism and what an absolutely soulless, self-centered creep Mark Zuckerberg is? Also, more power to anyone publicly exposing their sexual harassers.

On the other hand, this book reminded me of people with those ridiculous "I bought this Tesla before Elon went crazy" bumper stickers. Sarah Wynn-Williams comes across as, at BEST, horribly naive about the most basic facts of capitalism, and she actually seems to see herself as some kind of soft power hero. She admits that when she first started working at Facebook she was stunned by the idea that corporations have no other interest than growth. And her unshakeable, uncritical faith in liberal internationalism is just cringey.

The worst parts to …

Mixed feelings

No rating

Stories that the author seems to think are hilarious, like crashing events, getting stuck in military dictatorships, etc. -- well, they just aren't. They're terrifying. The seeming simplicity with which she was able to drag Facebook into the global stage.

All while taking ZERO blame.

This would be better named "Diary of a Collaborator"

Sarah Wynn-Williams thinks she's the heroine in the story, but she's not. She's part of the reason we're where we are now with social media, and she doesn't see it.

Facebookin/Metan toksisen työyhteisön kuvaus

3 stars

Careless people on muistelma Facebookin sisältä vuosilta 2011-2017. Sarah Wynn-Williams työskenteli Facebookin yhteiskuntasuhteiden ja diplomatian parissa ja todistaa kirjassa monia keskeisiä tapahtumia, kuten Myanmarin Rohingya-kansan joukkomurhan ja Facebookin roolin siinä, Kiinaan pyrkimisen ja paljon muuta. Keskeistä kirjassa on yhä toksisemmaksi käyvän työyhteisön ja ylimmän johdon piittaamattomuuden kuvaus.

Työyhteisössä tärkeintä oli kasvu seurauksista piittaamatta ja kaksinaamaisuus julkisuuden suhteen. Julkisuudessa esitettiin tiukkoja eettisiä periaatteita mutta aina ne kasvun tavoittelussa mieluiten unohdettiin. Kirja kuvaa miten yrityksen johto oli piittaamaton vaalivaikuttamisen, ääriliikkeiden ja myös nuorison mielenterveysongelmien suhteen. Kasvua tavoiteltiin myös veljeilemällä epädemokraattisten johtajien kanssa ja muun muassa Kiinalle luvattiin pääsy ja valvonta dataan. Kiina ei kuitenkaan tähän ryhtynyt.

Myanmarissa Internet oli synonyymi Facebookille. Myanmarin Facebookia moderoitiin Irlannista ja moderoinnin kontekstin asiantuntemus oli puutteellista. Sotilasjuntta pystyi ottamaan Facebookin valvontaansa bulvaanien ja murrettujen tilien avulla. Kansankiihotus oli helppoa. Seuraukset tiedetään. Siitähän syntyi muslimivähemmistön kansanmurha.

Tärkeintä kirjassa on Facebookin toksisen ja toksisemmaksi muuttuvan työkulttuurin kuvaus. Työyhteisö oli …

reviewed Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams

Eye-opening and unsurprising at the same time

4 stars

I was a at best a reluctant user of FB, and my scepticism of tech had probably kicked in before the time frame of this book, but I definitely held that kind of naïve optimism about tech's power for good at some point in time - a thing that in 2025 is already proving really difficult to rationalise in hindsight.

It's not a huge surprise to learn that the big personalities in this book are all dicks, and that working culture in a Silicon Valley tech company is dysfunctional and toxic. It was also good to be reminded just how implicated FB is in genocides and shitty election outcomes. On top of the diss to tech company culture (which I am always here for), Wynn-Williams' personal story is actually pretty killer (almost literally a couple of times) on its own!

avatar for huey@orreadi.com

rated it

4 stars