← Back to context

Comment by swiftcoder

7 hours ago

> Is Facebook really set up such that one person's whim is the single point of failure?

When I was there (pre-Covid) it was sort of a worst-of-all-worlds situation, compared to other firms.

On the one hand, Zuck maintains an absolute majority of voting shares, so what he say literally goes, with the board having no real authority to rein him in. If your project is something he takes a direct interest in, you are automatically subject to his whims.

On the other, Meta highly values the idea that they are a pretty flat org with no centralised command and control structure. So if your project is not under the baleful gaze of Zuck, there's a good chance that nobody in the executive suite has any fucking idea what is going on in your part of the company.

Contrast this to Bezos-era Amazon, where Bezos would sometimes directly intervene in pet projects like the FirePhone, but the entire company has a strong reporting hierarchy, and executives are expected to maintain direct command-and-control at all times over their reports (i.e. when Bezos sent one of the dreaded question-mark emails, the entire management chain damn well better be able to get their story straight top-to-bottom by the end of day)

I had Zuck once create a ticket against me on the padding of a button because it was on one of his pet projects.

In the middle of the night. During peak Cambridge Analytica scandal times.

I question his priorities.