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A year after denouncing Facebook’s practices, whistleblower Frances Haugen has one goal: to make social networks safer. Meet.
By Alexis Buisson At New York
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Frances Haugen speaks with as much passion about San Juan, the Puerto Rican city where she lives far from the cameras, as about her crusade to reform social networks. A year after revealing herself to the world by publicly accusing her former employer, Facebook (now Meta), of turning a blind eye to the dangers of its products, the American is crunching her new life, that of a high-profile whistleblower who travels the world to advocate an overhaul of social networks… and tackle Mark Zuckerberg, the group’s influential CEO.
Thursday September 22, she spoke in New York in front of the public of Unfinished Live, an appointment launched by the billionaire Frank McCourt, boss of the Olympique de Marseille (OM), to imagine a new Internet, more respectful of democracy and…
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