Man In HUGE Trouble After Catching What Facebook CEO Was Doing On The Ground Outside
It's been a rough couple of weeks for Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
He was caught in a data breach scandal with the site's user information, resulting in
Facebook stock plummeting by the hour daily for more than a week which has cost the company
nearly $100 billion in revenue loss.
He has agreed to go before Congress on the issue who have called him in on it, which
is set for April 11.
The saying "more money, more problems" certainly seems to be the case here.
However, in the midst of the fight against him and his site, he's now fighting back
against one random guy who happened to catch on camera what he was doing on the ground
outside his Silicon Valley home in California.
Zuckerberg is the on the very short list of the youngest billionaires in the world, an
honor he earned through innovating the way people communicate and interact online which
has completely changed our culture.
He reached this level of achievement in his 20's and has been a billionaire for several
years because of it.
Today, he's still just in his early 30's and is likely bearing an overwhelming amount
of pressure for the massive influence his site has in society.
It's easy to forget that this recognizable face is still just a regular guy, albeit rather
quirky.
When one photojournalist captured the CEO on camera before in a picture with his pet,
he found himself in immediate hot water for an ironic reason.
The Daily Mail reports:A photographer has accused Mark Zuckerberg of 'extraordinary
hypocrisy' after he was escorted to Facebook headquarters by security guards and accused
of breaching the tech giant's privacy for taking pictures of him cleaning up dog mess
on a public street.
Award-winning photo-journalist Nick Stern said he was stunned when he was approached
by a security guard in a golf buggy as he sat in his car on a public road – and was
made to drive to Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, California.
The 50-year-old, who lives in Los Angeles, said he had traveled to Palo Alto in April,
2011 to profile Zuckerberg when he first became a public figure.
He had taken a few photos of the Facebook chief executive walking in public with his
dog and girlfriend Priscilla Chan – some of which were published on DailyMail.com.
The world's youngest billionaire at the time proved himself to be a responsible dog
owner as he whipped out a plastic bag, crouched down and cleaned up his new puppy Beast's
mess near his home.The ramifications of Stern snapping a few shots that showed Zuckerberg
in a relatable moment have just come up now intentionally.
It's been seven years since Stern reportedly snapped these pictures, at a time when his
only intent was to capture this rising public figure at the start of what made him so notable
in society.
The result of those images is ironic today in the midst of the personal data breach that
Zuckerberg has just been accused of.
This is as to suggest that he only cares about his own privacy, even when it just comes to
an innocuous shot of a real moment in his day, more than his site users' very personal
information that was made available in some circumstances and allegedly used in what has
been suggested as a nefarious manner.
What makes this photograph debacle even more ironic were pictures that Zuckerberg reportedly
shared himself with the world, according to Mail Online:
Zuckerberg, 33, even posted similar pictures of Beast's toilet mishaps on the dog's
very own Facebook page during a visit to the launch of the new Facebook data center, in
Pineville, Oregon a week earlier.
The accompanying caption read: 'Mark took me to see Facebook's new data center, and
I christened it by peeing on the floor.
That puddle at the bottom left is all me,' it said.But eager to ensure no more pictures
of the elusive social media mogul got out – Facebook sent security to find photographer
Nick and 'summon' him to their headquarters.
Nick, originally from Hertford in the UK, said he was approached by a security guard
in a golf buggy – and told to drive to Facebook head office in Palo Alto.
The security guard followed his car to the parking lot, where he was escorted into the
premises and met by two senior Facebook employees who told him he was breaching Zuckerberg's
privacy and must stop taking photos of the billionaire.
Nick, who also works as an artist, says the way the meeting was conducted left him feeling
'intimidated' – although no direct threats were made.
He has now accused Zuckerberg of hypocrisy – following Facebook's privacy scandal
in which the personal data of around 50 million users was sold to a political consulting firm.
Facebook is a private business.
However, given the magnitude of users on the site, people it reaches, and power to transform
the way people think, feel, and what they see, it ultimately gives them the power of
persuasion that could potentially make him face significant ramifications.




For more infomation >> Man In HUGE Trouble After Catching What Facebook CEO Was Doing On The Ground Outside - Duration: 5:31.
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