Tensions were palpable at Meta before Mark Zuckerberg's all-hands meeting, where employees raised urgent questions regarding job security, future policies influenced by political changes, and modifications to workplace culture. In an effort to reduce potential drama, Zuckerberg announced altered Q&A protocols that concealed the most upvoted questions from employee view and disabled comments during the livestream. Addressing persistent concerns, he reassured staff about the status quo regarding office policies and justified the reduction of certain employee perks by emphasizing the need for financial discipline amidst company success.
With a lot of the rank and file clearly on edge, Zuckerberg made sure there would be fewer opportunities for drama during today's Q&A. Before it started, HR notified employees that "we will skip questions that we expect might be unproductive if they leak." For the first time, the most upvoted employee questions were no longer ranked for everyone to see and comments were disabled during the livestream.
I just have not been focused on this at all. I think the status quo is fine. Carry on.
Part of the reason why we're doing well financially is because we're being disciplined on costs.
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