While this week’s most prominent Facebook whistleblower? Frances Haugen’s comments got a lot of attention across media outlets and even Congress, another Facebook whistleblower who worked for a third-party contracting company made a few surprising statements of his own that didn’t get the attention they deserved.
Sitting down on the Patrick Bet-David Podcast, Facebook whistleblower Shawn Speagle made some shocking comments about how moderation worked at Facebook, at least until his departure in 2019.
Speagle was a content moderator who worked for one of Facebook’s content moderation subcontractors called Cognizant.
In episode 98 of the podcast, published this week, Speagle announced that it was possible for some third-party contractors to read user’s people’s direct messages with little oversight.
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“So, you guys were able to see what’s being said in the instant messages and text messages, or no?” host Patrick Bet-David asked.
“Yes,” Speagle answered.
Bet-David pressed further: “So whatever we post on there and we are communicating, you see all of it?”
“Yes, absolutely,” Speagle confirmed.
Laughing and seeming not believing what he was hearing, Bet-David asked again, “…if you wanted to see all of it, you could easily see it?”
“Yes, yes,” Speagle answered.
Bet-David delved deeper into the implications of this probing Speagle on some examples. Bet-David asked Speagle if it was theoretically possible to go and read the messages of someone a moderator didn’t like to “see what he stands for” and what they were saying to others.
Speagle said that in the “general queue there were limitations [on what moderators could see]” but where he was there were no limitations.
Bet-David asked Speagle if he was ever “tempted to see conversations of people that were higher up.” Speagle said that he was tempted, but “politics isn’t my thing” and he was “more tempted to see what [his] cousin was saying up in Georgia.”