Houston Chronicle

‘Rat-catching team’ is linked to spying on Facebook staff

‘They’ll squash you like a bug,’ employee says

- By Ethan Baron SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS

Silicon Valley's tech giants are famously secretive — after all, their proprietar­y products and services are worth billions — but a new report alleges that Facebook goes to Orwellian lengths to keep its workers from talking out of turn, even about their working conditions.

One Facebook employee was told he was led to expect a promotion, but instead was taken into a room where members of the Menlo Park, Calif.based social media giant's “rat-catching team” were waiting to interrogat­e him over an “innocuous” leak to the media, according to the report.

“You get on their bad side, and all of a sudden you are face to face with Mark Zuckerberg's secret police,” the unidentifi­ed man told The Guardian, referring to Facebook's CEO.

The man's grilling was a mere technicali­ty, the news outlet reported.

“They already knew he was guilty of leaking. They had records of a screenshot he'd taken, links he had clicked or hovered over, and they strongly indicated they had accessed chats between him and the journalist, dating back to before he joined the company.”

Facebook uses online and real-world surveillan­ce and legal threats to prevent and identify leaks that could jeopardize company secrets or involve criminal activity, The Guardian reported.

“However, those same tools are also used to catch employees and contractor­s who talk publicly, even if it's about their working conditions, misconduct or cultural challenges within the company,” according to The Guardian.

A Facebook spokeswoma­n told the news outlet that companies “routinely use business records in workplace investigat­ions, and we are no exception.”

For Facebook, part of the problem is the amount of company informatio­n that is shared with employees, and that trust is a double-edged sword, according to the report.

“If anyone steps out of line, they'll squash you like a bug,” the unidentifi­ed man reportedly told The Guardian.

In Europe, the contract workers hired to spot and block content Facebook prohibits are subjected to extremely intrusive oversight, the report suggested.

“One European Facebook content moderator signed a contract, seen by the Guardian, which granted the company the right to monitor and record his social media activities, including his personal Facebook account, as well as emails, phone calls and internet use,” according to the report.

“He also agreed to random personal searches of his belongings including bags, briefcases and car while on company premises. Refusal to allow such searches would be treated as gross misconduct.”

Security teams would plant “mouse trap” USB flash drives containing around the office to “test staff loyalty,” according to the Guardian report.

“If you find a USB or something you'd have to give it in straight away. If you plugged it into a computer it would throw up a flare and you'd be instantly escorted out of the building,” the purported former worker reportedly said.

 ?? Ernesto Arias/EFE / TNS file ?? A new report says Facebook, led by Mark Zuckerberg, has gone Orwellian internally.
Ernesto Arias/EFE / TNS file A new report says Facebook, led by Mark Zuckerberg, has gone Orwellian internally.

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