• sugar_in_your_tea
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    5 months ago

    No, but there may be an ethical one, depending on your ethical standards.

    That said, I highly recommend you leave Facebook. I did many years ago, and have decided to never touch Meta products again. I suggest you do the same, not because of a moral or ethical obligation, but because you dislike the platform.

    • Telorand@reddthat.com
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      5 months ago

      I think you could make a case for a moral basis, provided your morality stems from the “harm reduction” philosophy.

      For my part, privacy was my biggest concern. I was tired of being “the product” and being fed to the ragebait algorithm with no say in how my data got used (and the fact that you can’t trust that opting out will be respected). Leaving that abusive relationship was one of the best decisions I ever made, and everybody else would be wise to do the same.

      ETA: I’m even hesitant to follow a Threads account via Mastodon, because I can’t trust that Zuck won’t use that link as an open invitation to gobble up all my data again.

      • sugar_in_your_tea
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        5 months ago

        For me, it was mostly privacy and being a time suck. I got very little value out of it for how much time I spent on the platform, and them being openly hostile to my privacy made it that much worse. So it was very much a selfish decision, not a “moral obligation” or whatever.

        Morality would only get into it for me if they were complicit in protecting child abusers or something. But giving people what they say they want isn’t immoral, but it’s borderline unethical if they know what people claim they want is harmful. But honestly, I don’t think any tech platform should be deciding what is good or bad for people, they should merely provide a service. I see Facebook as essentially just providing a service, and they do a really good job at that, but whether that service has value is another discussion (I don’t think it does, at least not positive value).

        So I don’t think Facebook is immoral, and whether they’re unethical really comes down to what obligations you think a tech platform has. I think people shouldn’t leave Facebook for either reason, they should leave because they’ll likely have better mental health, lower risk of being radicalized, and more time to pursue things they find value in. Take all the energy you spend on Facebook and make your corner of the world just a little bit bitter.