Man in charge of half the internet, who can never be fired from his job, says he is learning from his mistakes
Mark Zuckerberg red wash extreme
Mark Zuckerberg red wash extreme

Justin Sullivan / Getty

  • Mark Zuckerberg has taken responsibility for the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

  • Zuckerberg makes mistakes, like everyone else. But a mistake on Facebook has global consequences. 

  • He can never be fired from Facebook due to the way his stock holdings control the company.

  • Zuckerberg thus has a massive amount of power (he even has a direct line to President Trump via board member Peter Thiel) but there is no way to hold him accountable if he makes a mistake.



My colleague Steve Kovach asked Mark Zuckerberg a really interesting question last week. "Has anyone been fired related to the Cambridge Analytica issue or any other data privacy issue?"

Zuckerberg told him, "I have not [fired anyone] due to the Cambridge Analytica situation. We are still working through this. At the end of the day, this is my responsibility. So there have been a bunch of questions about that."

There have indeed "been a bunch of questions about that."

Zuckerberg has fired plenty of people for much more minor offenses in the past. The most infamous firing was in 2015 of a staffer who had the temerity to tell the press that Facebook was working on an electronic personal assistant, named "M." In a meeting, Zuck told his employees that he would find the leaker and fire them. One week later, Zuckerberg reported that the person was terminated. "Many of those in attendance applauded," according to Recode's Kurt Wagner

When a problem crops up at Facebook and the person taking "responsibility" is not Zuckerberg, firings happen pretty quickly. As a policy, "people are fired at Facebook on a regular basis for not doing our jobs," COO Sheryl Sandberg says. The current scandal regarding the misuse of user data by Cambridge Analytica has been dragging on in public since November 2017, and since 2016 internally at Facebook, according to Sandberg.

"I still think that I’m going to do the best job to help run it going forward"

Yet Zuckerberg still thinks he is the best person to run Facebook. "I still think that I’m going to do the best job to help run it going forward," he told Kovach.

We will never know if there is someone better than Zuckerberg to be CEO because he has structured the stock so that even though the company's shares are owned by the public, they are controlled by Zuckerberg alone via an arrangement in which his stock has super-voting powers that overrule everyone else's. He is also the chairman of the board. Before the scandal erupted, investment bank analysts began to question this structure. Zuckerberg's interests are not the same as stockholders' interests, they argue. Zuck could do things that hurt the value of the company.