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New book title

Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg. |Photo source: Reuters

Social media and communication giant Meta Element hired an Indian “former police captain” in the government raid to arrest executives. This claim was made by Sarah Wynn-Williams in a newly released memoir Careless personFacebook and Whatsapp parents are seeking to block publications. Ms. Wynn-Williams has been the Director of Global Public Policy at Meta and until eight years ago, she served as a New Zealand diplomat.

Through an arbitration hearing in the United States, Meta prevented Ms. Williams from promoting the book and attempting to stop its publication. However, the book is still for sale in India.

“The book is a mix of obsolete and previously reported claims about the company and false allegations against our executives,” a spokesperson told the report. Hinduthere is no specific response to the claims related to India in the book. “Eight years ago, Sarah Wynn-Williams was fired for poor performance and toxic behavior, and an investigation conducted at the time determined her misleading and unfounded allegations of harassment. Since then, she has been paid by opposing book activists, which is just a continuation of the work.”

While much of the book is dedicated to the alleged behavior of meta-executives, including CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg, details of the company’s operations around the world have not yet been specifically competed.

“Former Police Captain”

Ms. Wynn Williams said she often went to India to work in the Yuanzhong period and described conflicts and frictions with the governments of South Korea, Brazil and India.

She wrote in India specifically: “In India, it’s so bad that Facebook’s leadership hired a former police captain who was given some boring, official titles but understood by the policy team as “a person who can handle the arrest situation well – that is, in a conflict between Facebook and the Indian government, prisons can be carried out in prison. “At this time, the company has not yet been renamed to Meta.

Free basics

Ms. Wynn-Williams launched the free basics around Facebook (not renamed Meta at the time), a program designed to provide low-income users with limited access to certain websites, a concept that India later banned violating all traffic on the internet in India, which should be the concept that the Internet is equal to the Internet, an effective concept.

“The government’s telecom regulator (TRAI) has begun to play its important role and has announced that it will look at programs like Internet.org. [Free Basics’s previous name] And let the public weigh whether it should be banned. “Our policy teams interact directly with the government, including [sic] Prime Minister Modi’s office. “We are lucky that this happened where we have very deep and high-level relationships in government, but it’s still hard. If we lose that in India, it will send all the wrong signals in Latin America.”

The internal action plan document describes a strategy to “inspire actual practices (Or at least appear) Public support,” she wrote. (According to the author, italics in the original document.) The company urged users to send automated emails around this time urging Trai to protect free basics, a strategy that angered Trai officials as the emails were already among millions and questions were not answered in the consultation documents published by Trai.

“Mark wrote to Prime Minister Modi, trying to arrange the meeting,” Ms Wyne Williams recalled, referring to Mr Zuckerberg. “Cheryl calls the minister in charge of the internet; Joel and the Indian team organize outreach activities to other politicians. There are a lot of round trips to India.”

Ms. Wynn-Williams wrote on January 7, 2016 that Facebook was able to push users to send about 16 million emails by leveraging pop-ups sent to Indian users – opening “The giant emails Mark does not allow Sheryl to use,” she said. [promoting] Organ donation.” But she said the initial comments counted only 1.4 million comments, putting executives in panic.

“A few days later, the breakout. The team figured out what was going on. Someone at Trai (whether it was controlling the email address of public comments) or chose all Facebook’s emails.” Finally, Ms. Wynn-Williams wrote: “Mark and some of the world’s smartest technical ideas were dedicated to this few months. [outreach strategy]some low-level officials in India failed them by clicking on a single exit box. ”

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