BBC:
A Facebook engineer has quit the firm, saying they "can no longer stomach" being part of an organisation "profiting off hate".
Ashok Chandwaney is the latest employee to go public with concerns about how the company deals with hate speech.
The engineer added it was "choosing to be on the wrong side of history".
Facebook responded by saying it had removed millions of hate-related posts. Another of its ex-engineers has also come to its defence.
The thrust of the post by Ashok Chandwaney - who uses "they" and "them" as personal pronouns - is that Facebook moves quickly to solve certain problems, but when it comes to dealing with hate speech, it is more interested in PR than implementing real change.
Can [or should] Facebook successfully purge its platform of speech it considers harmful?
(Score: 2) by hendrikboom on Thursday September 10 2020, @02:49PM (1 child)
Current medical school enrollment here in Canada, and probably elsewhere, is majority female.
Back in the 60's, there were quotas on the number of women that were permitted to enroll.
The result back then was that if your doctor was female, she was likely one of the best doctors around. Like my wife, a hematologist, who died last year.
-- hendrik
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Friday September 11 2020, @02:24AM
I'm sorry for your loss.
Washington DC delenda est.