>"Zuckerberg hosts weekly meetings where he shares details of unreleased new products and strategies in front of thousands of employees. Even junior staff members and contractors can see what other teams are working on by looking at one of many of the groups on the company’s internal version of Facebook."
No kidding they watch! When you are a publicly traded company, any form of information that is leaked, can have an enormous effect on the price.
As a former trader, I would live for those days of information leak!
Semi-unrelated, but for those of you who use slack at work and want to know if it's monitored, any employee can see the team's "export policy." Just google it and you'll see who has access in a few simple steps.
"Some employees switch their phones off or hide them out of fear that their location is being tracked. One current Facebook employee who recently spoke to Wired asked the reporter to turn off his phone so the company would have a harder time tracking if it had been near the phones of anyone from Facebook."
does this lend credence to the "your phone is listening to you and reporting back to facebook" theory?
6 comments
[ 2.0 ms ] story [ 21.9 ms ] threadAnd water is wet :]
Whoa. Pinkerton (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_union_busting_in_th...) still exists?
Edit: yep. Same company: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinkerton_(detective_agency)
No kidding they watch! When you are a publicly traded company, any form of information that is leaked, can have an enormous effect on the price.
As a former trader, I would live for those days of information leak!
(What Drives Stock Price Behavior Following Extreme One-Day Returns)(2003)[http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1475-6803.00048/f...] (How do stocks react to extreme market events? Evidence from Brazil)(2017)[https://www.mcgill.ca/desautels/files/desautels/overreaction...]
Maybe this article just "isn't very interesting" and suddenly there are better things to discuss elsewhere.
does this lend credence to the "your phone is listening to you and reporting back to facebook" theory?