
Analysis: Zuckerberg pushes back hard against the Facebook whistleblower. But it's not the full story
CNN
Hours after Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen testified before Congress about how the social network poses a danger to children and democracy, Mark Zuckerberg took to the platform he built and posted a 1,300-word screed trying to undermine her.
His main argument was that Haugen was taking Facebook's research on its impact on children -- among the tens of thousands of pages of internal documents and research she took before she left the company -- out of context. In essence, he argued she cannot be trusted to properly portray the company's findings, claiming she painted a "false picture of the company."
But despite employing many talented and diligent researchers, it's Facebook's top executive who cannot be trusted when it comes to sharing the work of those researchers with the public.













