MARK ZUCKERBERG SOLD USA CITIZEN DATA TO THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY

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The Controversial Origins of Mark Zuckerberg. First misogyny, then a campus scandal. and now, he’s sold his American customers’ data to the Chinese Communist Party.

Long before Facebook became a global tech empire, its origins were steeped in controversy and ethical failings. At the center of the story is Mark Zuckerberg, who, while still a Harvard sophomore, launched a project that would foreshadow Facebook’s complicated relationship with privacy, consent, and power.



The “FaceMash” Scandal

In 2003, Zuckerberg created FaceMash, a website that invited Harvard students to rank female classmates based on their attractiveness. To build it, he hacked into university databases to obtain student photos without their consent. The site—blatantly sexist and demeaning—sparked immediate backlash across campus.

Though the story has sometimes been softened in retellings, internal disciplinary records confirm that Zuckerberg faced a Harvard administrative board over the incident. He was not expelled, but he was placed on academic probation and the site was removed within 48 hours. The scandal cemented his early reputation as someone willing to cross ethical lines in pursuit of viral attention, money and power.



Betrayal of the Winklevoss Twins

Shortly after, Zuckerberg was recruited by Harvard classmates Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, along with Divya Narendra, to help build their own social networking site, then called HarvardConnection (later ConnectU).

Emails released in court documents during a lengthy legal battle reveal that Zuckerberg stalled their project while secretly working on a competing platform: TheFacebook.

Launched in 2004, TheFacebook bore striking similarities to the concept he had been hired to develop.

The Winklevoss twins filed a lawsuit claiming he stole their idea. Though Zuckerberg denied wrongdoing, the case was settled in 2008 for $65 million in cash and Facebook stock. The lawsuit and the documents it produced—including emails where Zuckerberg appeared to gloat about deceiving the ConnectU team—paint a troubling picture of the tech prodigy’s early methods.



Whistleblower Allegations: Compromising National Security and Exploiting Children

In April 2025, Sarah Wynn-Williams, a former Meta executive, testified before the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism, alleging that Meta compromised U.S. national security interests to expand its business in China. Wynn-Williams claimed that Meta executives misled employees, Congress, and the public about their dealings with the Chinese Communist Party, particularly regarding artificial intelligence cooperation. She alleged that Meta prioritized business interests over national security and ethical values, including deleting the account of Chinese dissident Guo Wengui at Beijing’s behest and attempting to create a data pipeline to China, which was halted only due to congressional intervention.

Furthermore, Wynn-Williams accused Meta of exploiting the emotional vulnerabilities of teenage users for profit. She testified that the company used algorithms to detect when teenagers felt insecure or depressed and shared this data with advertisers to target them with products during moments of emotional weakness. Despite being aware of the harmful psychological effects, including worsening body image issues for teen girls, Meta executives allegedly vetoed measures to protect young users.



A Legacy of Ethical Questions

From the exploitation of women’s images at Harvard to allegations of compromising national security and exploiting minors, Zuckerberg’s journey reflects not just personal ambition but also systemic ethical challenges within the tech industry. These events underscore the need for greater accountability and transparency in how tech companies operate, particularly when their actions have far-reaching societal impacts.

Now his issue is that he spends all his free time in China with the members of the Chinese Communist Party as he’s handed over American citizens account information (data).

He’s already sold American’s data information to China. What other egregious thing must he do before being recognized for what he is? A traitor that’s committed treason.