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[return to "Facebook proven to negatively impact mental health"]
1. inambe+Lv[view] [source] 2022-09-22 15:47:30
>>giulio+(OP)
I wonder how people continue to work at Facebook. I know they tend to have the highest salaries from the FAANG groups, but still. We, as engineers and builders, have the responsibility to think critically about how the things we are working on will be used.
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2. blep_+qH[view] [source] 2022-09-22 16:36:29
>>inambe+Lv
Earlier this year, I had a recruiter invite me to interview there, and I made an attempt at convincing myself with reasoning like:

- they're going to do their evil thing anyway, may as well show up and intentionally do it marginally worse

- they're going to pay someone large sums of money, may as well be me

- I increasingly believe this whole industry is net evil overall, and large sums of money mean I can leave it sooner

- also, it was their VR thing, and if it was a VR thing at literally any other company I would be excited about that because VR is at least conceptually cool

These are not particularly good arguments, and that's why I don't work there now. But statistically, I can imagine a few people who we would otherwise categorize as non-evil actually convince themselves with arguments like these, and when you're casting as wide a net as Facebook does, a few is all you need.

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3. JohnFe+vI[view] [source] 2022-09-22 16:42:32
>>blep_+qH
I think those arguments would only be persuasive to someone who is actively looking for a way to paper over their ethical concerns and take the money. They wouldn't be persuasive for a person trying to be true to their ethical stance.
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4. blep_+xL[view] [source] 2022-09-22 16:56:21
>>JohnFe+vI
This is an accurate description of my thought processes at the time.
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