WASHINGTON — It took two decades, three genocides, four congressional investigations, and a global trail of ruined democracies — but the monster finally stumbled.
Today, in an unprecedented ruling at The Hague, Facebook’s parent company Meta was found liable for fueling mass violence in Myanmar, Ethiopia, and the Philippines through its outrage-driven algorithm. Billions in reparations were ordered. Mark Zuckerberg, who once smirked his way through congressional hearings, was forced to sit stone-faced as survivors described how his “community platform” turned into a murder weapon.
The verdict did more than award damages. It cracked the shield that Big Tech had always hidden behind: “We’re just the platform.” Not anymore. Courts across Europe and Africa lined up to file copycat suits. U.S. lawmakers, backed into a corner, introduced emergency antitrust measures to break Meta’s monopoly. For the first time since the telephone, the world admitted: when you own the lines of communication, you don’t get to wash your hands of the blood that runs down them.
In Manila, crowds took to the streets in a victory march. In Nairobi, former content moderators who’d been paid pennies to filter gore declared that the ruling proved what they’d always known: the machine was built on exploitation. And in Washington, a few politicians — the same ones who once cashed Facebook checks — scrambled to rewrite history and claim they’d “always had concerns.”
History won’t remember their excuses. It will remember the dead, the displaced, the fractured nations — and the day a Silicon Valley empire learned it wasn’t untouchable.
And maybe, just maybe, this is the start of something new: the end of the algorithm as tyrant, and the beginning of technology that serves people instead of feeding on their hate.
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