Book Review | Facebook is revealed by page turner

Life without Facebook and the Internet? Really? Give me a link.
Interesting, but not far from the truth. Our lives revolve around the ubiquitous and omnipresent internet, with Facebook (now Meta) being one of the most colorful by-products. For everyone, it has its own definition. But how many people actually want to know what’s going on behind this app with the most clicks?
Sarah Wynn-Williams, a former New Zealand diplomat, international lawyers found themselves suddenly bitten by bugs to “save the world” and were overcome by “Facebook Epiphany”. This was in 2009, “still likely to be full of hope for the internet” and “be optimistic about Facebook.” She firmly believes that she can make it change the world by running people. Her idea and rightly, it can use a lot of data that spells the power. Ironically, it is this accumulation of data that will cause trouble for the company in the future and will largely undermine subscriber confidence.
Wynn-Williams’ journey with Facebook is formatted, unknown, and completely out of the box, just like her trips and meetings. The meeting with the German delegation was interesting, “when the Germans disapprove of everything Facebook represents”, as did Mark Zuckerberg’s reluctance interaction with the New Zealand Prime Minister. When she visits Cartagena, a little bit about Hillary Clinton, then-U.S. Secretary of State, let you sit up. But when the pregnant FB official compares to the chaotic Myanmar Nobel (Junta) and Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, you miss your heartbeat. Davos, Colombia, Türkiye – Conferences and policy discussions are chaotic and scattered with the suffering of breastfeeding mothers whose pumps need to be inserted. Then, in Zuckerberg’s entourage and super profitable private travel experience, three weeks of business trips in Asia during a super luxury trip to the Indonesian resort. Sarah Wynn-Williams first met her boss Mark Zuckerberg while streaming dinners at the Samsung headquarters in South Korea and at the fish market and Michelin-starred restaurants in Tokyo.
Very heart-warming, very exciting, and a complete list of who is a pleasant and interesting book in a book. It deals with core issues such as the app's user engagement policy, as well as the general key to its employees by FB Top Rung, among other well-known elements. But Wynn-Williams' Pageturner is hard to put aside.
Careless people: The story of my previous work
Sarah Wynn-Williams
Pan Macmillan
pp. 390; 899 rupees