Tech Giants offer Empty apologies because users can't quit
A true apology consists of a sincere
acknowledgement of wrong-doing, a show of empathic remorse for why you wronged
and the harm it caused, and a promise of restitution by improving ones actions
to make things right. Without the follow-through, saying sorry isn’t an
apology, it’s a hollow ploy for forgiveness.
That’s the
kind of “sorry” we’re getting from tech giants — an attempt to quell bad PR and
placate the afflicted, often without the systemic change necessary to prevent
repeated problems. Sometimes it’s delivered in a blog post. Sometimes it’s in
an executive apology tour of media interviews. But rarely is it in the form of
change to the underlying structures of a business that caused the issue.
Intractable
Revenue
Unfortunately,
tech company business models often conflict with the way we wish they would
act. We want more privacy but they thrive on targeting and personalization
data. We want control of our attention but they subsist on stealing as much of
it as possible with distraction while showing us ads. We want safe, ethically
built devices that don’t spy on us but they make their margins by manufacturing
them wherever’s cheap with questionable standards of labor and oversight. We
want groundbreaking technologies to be responsibly applied, but juicy
government contracts and the allure of China’s enormous population compromise their
morals. And we want to stick to what we need and what’s best for us, but they
monetize our craving for the latest status symbol or content through planned
obsolescence and locking us into their platforms.
The result
is that even if their leaders earnestly wanted to impart meaningful change to
provide restitution for their wrongs, their hands are tied by entrenched
business models and the short-term focus of the quarterly earnings cycle. They
apologize and go right back to problematic behavior. The Washington Post
recently chronicled a dozen times Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has apologized,
yet the social network keeps experiencing fiasco after fiasco. Tech giants
won’t improve enough on their own.
Addiction To
Utility
The threat
of us abandoning ship should theoretically hold the captains in line. But tech
giants have evolved into fundamental utilities that many have a hard time
imagining living without. How would you connect with friends? Find what you
needed? Get work done? Spend your time? What hardware or software would you
cuddle up with in the moments you feel lonely? We live our lives through tech,
have become addicted to its utility, and fear the withdrawal.
If there
were principled alternatives to switch to, perhaps we could hold the giants
accountable. But the scalability, network effects, and aggregation of supply by
distributors has led to near monopolies in these core utilities. The
second-place solution is often distant. What’s the next best social network that
serves as an identity and login platform that isn’t owned by Facebook? The next
best premium mobile and PC maker behind Apple? The next best mobile operating
system for the developing world beyond Google’s Android? The next best
ecommerce hub that’s not Amazon? The next best search engine? Photo feed? Web
hosting service? Global chat app? Spreadsheet?
Facebook is
still growing in the US & Canada despite the backlash, proving that tech
users aren’t voting with their feet. And if not for a calculation methodology
change, it would have added 1 million users in Europe this quarter too.
One of the
few tech backlashes that led to real flight was #DeleteUber. Workplace
discrimination, shady business protocols, exploitative pricing and more
combined to spur the movement to ditch the ridehailing app. But what was
different here is that US Uber users did have a principled alternative to
switch to without much hassle: Lyft. The result was that “Lyft benefitted
tremendously from Uber’s troubles in 2018” eMarketer’s forecasting director
Shelleen Shum told the USA Today in May. Uber missed eMarketer’s projections
while Lyft exceeded them, narrowing the gap between the car services. And
meanwhile, Uber’s CEO stepped down as it tried to overhaul its internal
policies.
This is why
we need regulation that promotes competition by preventing massive mergers and
giving users the right to interoperable data portability so they can easily
switch away from companies that treat them poorly
But in the
absence of viable alternatives to the giants, leaving these mainstays is
inconvenient. After all, they’re the ones that made us practically allergic to
friction. Even after massive scandals, data breaches, toxic cultures, and
unfair practices, we largely stick with them to avoid the uncertainty of life
without them. Even Facebook added 1 million monthly users in the US and Canada
last quarter despite seemingly every possible source of unrest. Tech users are
not voting with their feet. We’ve proven we can harbor ill will towards the giants
while begrudgingly buying and using their products. Our leverage to improve
their behavior is vastly weakened by our loyalty.
Inadequate
Oversight
Regulators
have failed to adequately step up either. This year’s congressional hearings
about Facebook and social media often devolved into inane and uninformed
questioning like how does Facebook earn money if its doesn’t charge? “Senator,
we run ads” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said with a smirk. Other times,
politicians were so intent on scoring partisan points by grandstanding or
advancing conspiracy theories about bias that they were unable to make any real
progress. A recent survey commissioned by Axios found that “In the past year,
there has been a 15-point spike in the number of people who fear the federal
government won’t do enough to regulate big tech companies — with 55% now
sharing this concern.”
Regulation could protect Facebook, not
punish it
When
regulators do step in, their attempts can backfire. GDPR was supposed to help
tamp down on the dominance of Google and Facebook by limiting how they could
collect user data and making them more transparent. But the high cost of
compliance simply hindered smaller players or drove them out of the market
while the giants had ample cash to spend on jumping through government hoops.
Google actually gained ad tech market share and Facebook saw the littlest loss
while smaller ad tech firms lost 20 or 30 percent of their business.
Europe’s
GDPR privacy regulations backfired, reinforcing Google and Facebook’s
dominance. Chart via Ghostery, Cliqz, and WhoTracksMe.
Even the
Honest Ads act, which was designed to bring political campaign transparency to
internet platforms following election interference in 2016, has yet to be
passed even despite support from Facebook and Twitter. There’s hasn’t been
meaningful discussion of blocking social networks from acquiring their
competitors in the future, let alone actually breaking Instagram and WhatsApp
off of Facebook. Governments like the U.K. that just forcibly seized documents
related to Facebook’s machinations surrounding the Cambridge Analytica debacle
provide some indication of willpower. But clumsy regulation could deepen the
moats of the incumbents, and prevent disruptors from gaining a foothold. We
can’t depend on regulators to sufficiently protect us from tech giants right
now.
Our Hope On
The Inside
The best bet
for change will come from the rank and file of these monolithic companies. With
the war for talent raging, rock star employees able to have huge impact on
products, and compensation costs to keep them around rising, tech giants are
vulnerable to the opinions of their own staff. It’s simply too expensive and
disjointing to have to recruit new high-skilled workers to replace those that
flee.
Google
declined to renew a contract with the government after 4000 employees
petitioned and a few resigned over Project Maven’s artificial intelligence
being used to target lethal drone strikes. Change can even flow across company
lines. Many tech giants including Facebook and Airbnb have removed their forced
arbitration rules for harassment disputes after Google did the same in response
to 20,000 of its employees walking out in protest.
Thousands of
Google employees protested the company’s handling of sexual harassment and
misconduct allegations on Nov. 1.
Facebook is
desperately pushing an internal communications campaign to reassure staffers
it’s improving in the wake of damning press reports from the New York Times and
others. TechCrunch published an internal memo from Facebook’s outgoing VP of
communications Elliot Schrage in which he took the blame for recent issues,
encouraged employees to avoid finger-pointing, and COO Sheryl Sandberg tried to
reassure employees that “I know this has been a distraction at a time when
you’re all working hard to close out the year — and I am sorry.” These internal
apologizes could come with much more contrition and real change than those
paraded for the public.
And so after
years of us relying on these tech workers to build the product we use every
day, we must now rely that will save us from them. It’s a weighty
responsibility to move their talents where the impact is positive, or commit to
standing up against the business imperatives of their employers. We as the
public and media must in turn celebrate when they do what’s right for society,
even when it reduces value for shareholders. If apps abuse us or unduly rob us
of our attention, we need to stay off of them.
And we must
accept that shaping the future for the collective good may be inconvenient for
the individual. There’s an oppprtunity here not just to complain or wish, but
to build a social movement that holds tech giants accountable for delivering
the change they’ve promised over and over.
TechCrunch
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