Every claim on this site is drawn from public record. Below is each claim, its nature (fact vs opinion), and direct links to primary sources.
Fact on record
Facebook allowed a third-party app to harvest data from up to 87 million users without their explicit consent. The data was used to build psychographic profiles for political micro-targeting in the 2016 US election. Facebook paid a $5 billion FTC penalty in 2019.
Fact on record
Internal Facebook research shown to Zuckerberg directly found that the platform's engagement algorithm was amplifying outrage and extremist content. A 2021 WSJ investigation based on internal documents confirmed executives were repeatedly warned and chose not to act.
Fact on record
The UN Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar concluded that Facebook played a "determining role" in spreading hate speech that incited violence against the Rohingya people. An estimated 700,000+ were displaced; thousands killed. Meta later acknowledged it was too slow to act.
Fact on record
Emails entered into evidence in the FTC's antitrust case show Zuckerberg explicitly framing acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp as a strategy to neutralise competitive threats rather than improve products. The FTC case, joined by 48 state AGs, sought to force a breakup of Meta.
Fact on record
Thousands of content moderators employed as contractors by Meta were exposed to graphic violent and sexual content daily with inadequate psychological support. A class-action lawsuit resulted in a $52 million settlement. The $52M figure equates to roughly 90 minutes of Meta's annual profit at the time.
Fact on record
Following the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Nebraska law enforcement obtained a warrant for a 17-year-old's private Facebook Messenger conversations about her abortion. Meta complied. The teenager was criminally charged. The case is a matter of public court record.
Fact on record
In January 2025, Zuckerberg announced Meta was ending its US third-party fact-checking program, replacing it with a community-notes model. Meta donated $1M to Trump's inauguration fund. Dana White, a Trump ally, was appointed to the Meta board. The announcements were made in the weeks before the inauguration.
Fact on record
Internal Meta research slides, leaked by whistleblower Frances Haugen and published by the WSJ, stated that Instagram "makes body image issues worse for one in three teen girls." Meta had not disclosed this research publicly. It continued to grow Instagram among teens regardless.
Fact on record
In March 2026 an LA jury found Meta liable for deliberately designing addictive products targeting children. Days earlier, a New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375M for failing to protect children from predators. Both are matters of public court record.
Fact on record
Internal Facebook documents and academic research showed the platform was a primary vector for vaccine misinformation. Meta was repeatedly warned by internal teams and public health authorities. Frances Haugen's disclosures confirmed executives deprioritised public health interventions that would reduce engagement.
Fact on record
Shareholders filed an $8B class action alleging Zuckerberg and other executives sold stock after learning about the Cambridge Analytica story before it became public. The case settled. Sheryl Sandberg was separately sanctioned for deleting relevant communications.
Opinion based on reported facts
Zuckerberg's documented actions include donating $1M to Trump's inauguration, flying to Mar-a-Lago, appointing Trump allies to the board, and publicly referencing White House relationships during FTC negotiations. The FTC antitrust trial, valued at ~$30B in potential divestitures, is ongoing.
Fact on record
Ireland's Data Protection Commission issued Meta a €1.2 billion fine, the largest GDPR penalty in history, for transferring EU personal data to US servers in violation of EU law. This followed years of regulatory warnings and an earlier Court of Justice of the EU ruling invalidating the legal basis Meta relied on.
Fact on record
When Meta acquired WhatsApp in 2014, Zuckerberg personally stated data would not be shared with Facebook. In 2021, WhatsApp updated its terms to require data sharing with Meta or loss of service. The EU fined Meta €225M for GDPR violations arising from this change.
Fact on record
Facebook used facial recognition technology to scan user photos in Illinois without consent, violating the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. A $650M class-action settlement was approved in 2021, one of the largest privacy settlements in US history.
Fact on record
Investigations by The Markup, STAT News, and others found that Meta's tracking pixel was embedded in hospital patient portals, tax filing sites, mental health platforms, and crisis services, transmitting sensitive data to Meta without user knowledge or consent, including people who have never had a Facebook account.
Fact on record
Meta's Reality Labs division reported cumulative operating losses exceeding $47 billion between 2020 and 2024, as disclosed in Meta's public earnings reports. Meta conducted three rounds of mass layoffs in 2022–2023, cutting approximately 21,000 jobs. Zuckerberg publicly branded 2023 the "Year of Efficiency."
Fact on record
In response to Australia's News Media Bargaining Code, Meta blocked all news content in Australia in February 2021, including the pages of government health departments, emergency services, charities, and crisis lines. The blackout occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic. Meta reversed the block after negotiations.
Fact on record
In January 2025, Meta announced the termination of its diversity, equity and inclusion programs; the end of third-party fact-checking in the US; the relocation of trust and safety teams from California; and the reinstatement of previously banned accounts. All announcements were made within a single week.