Slate Announces List of The 30 Most Evil Tech Companies

An anonymous reader quotes Slate: Separating out the meaningful threats from the noise is hard. Is Facebook really the danger to democracy it looks like? Is Uber really worse than the system it replaced? Isn’t Amazon’s same-day delivery worth it? Which harms are real and which are hypothetical? Has the techlash gotten it right? And which of these companies is really the worst? Which ones might be, well, evil? We don’t mean evil in the mustache-twirling, burn-the-world-from-a-secret-lair sense — well, we mostly don’t mean that — but rather in the way Googlers once swore to avoid mission drift, respect their users, and spurn short-term profiteering, even though the company now regularly faces scandals in which it has violated its users’ or workers’ trust. We mean ills that outweigh conveniences. We mean temptations and poison pills and unanticipated outcomes. Slate sent ballots to “a wide range of journalists, scholars, advocates, and others who have been thinking critically about technology for years,” and reported that while America’s big tech companies topped the list, “our respondents are deeply concerned about foreign companies dabbling in surveillance and A.I., as well as the domestic gunners that power the data-broker business.” But while there were some disagreements, Palantir still rose to #4 on the list because “almost everyone distrusts Peter Thiel.” Interestingly, their list ranks SpaceX at #17 (for potentially disrupting astronomy by clogging the sky with satellites) and ranks Tesla at #14 for “its troubled record of worker safety and its dubious claims that it will soon offer ‘full self-driving’ to customers who have already paid $7,000 for the promised add-on… Our respondents say the very real social good that Tesla has done by creating safe, zero-emission vehicles does not justify misdeeds, like apparent ‘stealth recalls’ of defects that appear to violate safety laws or the 19 unresolved Clean Air Act violations at its paint shop.” Slate’s article includes its comprehensive list of the 30 most dangerous tech companies. But here’s the top 10: Amazon Facebook Alphabet Palantir Technologies Uber Apple Microsoft Twitter ByteDance Exxon MobilThere’s also lots of familiar names higher up on the list, including both 8chan (#20) and Cloudflare (#21). 23andMe came in at #18, while Huawei was #11. Netflix does not appear anywhere on the list, but Disney ranks #15. And Oracle was #19. “It takes a lot to make me feel like Google is being victimized by a bully,” wrote Cory Doctorow, “but Oracle managed it.”

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