> You say that so definitively. Have you worked on a product with millions of new users a week? It's an extremely hard, constantly shifting problem.
Facebook has hundreds of engineers and enough data to do match patterns against. Facebook can largely identify who's who.
> Facebook's entire business relies on user and advertise trust. Why would they sacrifice that for some short term growth that would inevitably kill the business by eroding trust?
"Facebook has hundreds of engineers and enough data to do match patterns against. Facebook can largely identify who's who." I know, I used to work there. I was asking you. Pattern matching isn't black-and-white, as you alluded to in your previous comment.
"Yes, the infamous 'they trust me, dumb fucks'?"
You didn't do or say stupid things when you were 19? You don't believe in giving second chances, let alone to a teenager?
Facebook has hundreds of engineers and enough data to do match patterns against. Facebook can largely identify who's who.
> Facebook's entire business relies on user and advertise trust. Why would they sacrifice that for some short term growth that would inevitably kill the business by eroding trust?
Yes, the infamous "they trust me, dumb fucks"?