Former Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg spent $ 13,000 in the underwear for herself and a new female assistant during a trip to Europe – and prompted her to “come to bed” during a private jet flight along the way home, according to a new explosive memory.
Bomb claims were made in a book published by Sarah Wynn-Williams, a former Facebook employee who wrote for the six years he spent in the technology giant in “Careless People: A Warning Tale of Power, Claim and Loss of Idealism”.
During a long trip across Europe, Sandberg and her 26-year-old assistant took their curves by sleeping on each other’s lap and hitting each other’s hair, Wynn-Williams claimed in the explosive story.
During the trip, Sandberg instructed Wynn-Williams to buy interior for both, regardless of the latest cost of $ 13,000, according to a compilation of the book published Monday by the New York Times.
According to the book review, a pajamas-lined sandberg increased significantly when Wynn-Williams refused its offer to join it in the “single bed on the plane” during a flight house on a private plane.
Williams left the company in 2017 – before reuniting in Meta.
“This is a mixture of old and previously reported claims about the company and false accusations for our leaders,” spokesman Meta Post told.
“Eight years ago, Sarah Wynn-Williams was fired for poor performance and toxic behavior, and an investigation at the time determined that she made deceptive and unfounded accusations of harassment.”
The spokesman added that “Since then, she has been paid by activists against the phase and this is just a continuation of that job.”
“Whistle status defends communications to the government, not unhappy activists trying to sell books,” said Meta spokesman.
Wynn-Williams also recalls the highest Facebook policy executive Joel Kaplan, engaging in behavior that makes it deeply uncomfortable, according to the review.
Kaplan, a former Sandberg’s former seaman and ex-boyfriend from Harvard, served as vice president of US Facebook politics before becoming Vice President of Global Politics-and ultimately the head of Wynn-Williams.
Kaplan, a conservative operative with deep links with Republican politics, once pressure on her on the dance floor at a work event, commenting that she looked “soft” and making disturbing remarks about her husband, wrote Wynn-Williams in the book.
When she died of an embolism of amniotic fluid as she gave birth to her second child, Kaplan continued to email her throughout her maternity leave, insisting on weekly video conferences, she was claimed.
Even after she explained that she required additional surgery because it was still bleeding, Kaplan reportedly suppressing her: “But from the bleeding?”
An internal Facebook investigation eventually cleared Kaplan for any wrongdoing, according to the book’s Times review.
The company’s investigation lasted 42 days during which 17 different witnesses were interviewed, according to a source with knowledge of the situation.
Sarah Feinberg, a former Meta employee, took on the topics of the social media platform to protect her former employee and Kaplan.
“I left Facebook/Meta more than a decade ago to return to the government service, so it has passed a minute … But this book overlaps with all my years there, and the author was one of my colleagues. While everyone is right for their opinion and their experience, I do not know this company, its leaders or my time,”
Feinberg added that “was present for many of these events – and I worked on some of these projects – and these descriptions are simply not even close”.
She also defended Kaplan, writing: “I have worked with Joel Kaplan throughout my years on Facebook – he was one of my closest colleagues – and I have never noticed that he would be anything other than professional, thoughtful, strategic and honest.”
Meanwhile, Wynn-Williams describes CEO Mark Zuckerberg as someone who switched from fixing to coding and engineering to an executive consumed by politics and public worship, according to Times.
While in a tour in Asia, Wynn-Williams was instructed to organize a crowd of over a million people to ensure that he was “gently moved” while on a trip to Indonesia, claimed.
At one point, he told Wynn-Williams that President Andrew Jackson, known for signing the Law on Indian Departure, was the biggest chief of the US because he “did things”.
Wynn-Williams memory was held by the publisher until just days before his release on Tuesday.
It offered an internal internal account to company leaders, portraying them as hungry by power, irresponsible and indifferent to the consequences of their actions.
In the book, Wynn-Williams compared Zuckerberg and Sandberg, 55, with “Careless People” from The Great Gatsby, destroying things and letting others deal with the consequences.
The book also detailed Facebook’s secret efforts to access the Chinese market through a project called “Aldrin”, which included partnerships, censorship tools and data sharing proposals.
According to Wynn-Williams, Zuckerberg watched to encourage himself with the Chinese Communist Party.
These efforts included “providing notifications to CCP officials on new technologies such as artificial intelligence, developing blessed CCP censorship tools, and making efforts to conceal Meta CCP cooperation from the United States Congress.”
When questioned by Congress in 2018, Zuckerberg claimed, “No decision was made on the conditions in which any possible future service in China can be provided.”
In the Times book review, Wynn-Williams is quoted as openly stating, “He is lying.”
Now working in his policy, Wynn-Williams has filed a whistleblower complaint at the SEC.
A Sandberg spokesman refused to comment.
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