The Washington Post has a retrospective on 14 years of Mark Zuckerberg saying sorry, not sorry:
From the moment the Facebook founder entered the public eye in 2003 for creating a Harvard student hot-or-not rating site, he's been apologizing. So we collected this abbreviated history of his public mea culpas.
See also:
Why Zuckerberg's 14-Year Apology Tour Hasn't Fixed Facebook.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by looorg on Wednesday April 11 2018, @08:50PM
... and when I said today I meant yesterday. Apparently during day 2 they did ask about Shadow profiles and Zuck claimed total ignorance and started to talk about other things that nobody apparently understood and we learned nothing really. Except that there are "shadow profiles" but they don't call them that and that they gather data on everyone or all the stuff they can find for security reasons. I guess everyone that hasn't signed up for FB yet is a potential security threat they have to keep in a special database. Until they do sign up at which case they transition from horrible luddite to most valued customer .. or merchandise ... or that is the moment in which you transition from known unknown to product?