Post

Lid-lifting Kiwi author forced to sit in silence at festival

Lid-lifting Kiwi author forced to sit in silence at festival

Source: Radio New Zealand (world)

Former Faceook executive Sarah Wynn-Williams was not allowed to nod or shake her head, introduced to the Hay Festival as “an author in a hotage situation”.

New Zealand author Sarah Wynn-Williams was forced to sit in silence during an hour-long panel discussion about her book which lays out all the details about her time working at Facebook.

Wynn-Williams, a former Facebook executive, was introducted at Sunday’s Hay Festival in Wales a “an author in a hostage situation”, BBC reported.

She wasn’t allowed to nod or shake her head to the full audience. Copies of Wynn-Williams’ book, Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed and Lost Idealism, were pulled from the bookshop.

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 09: Sarah Wynn-Williams, former Director of Global Public Policy at Facebook, is sworn in before testifying during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill on April 09, 2025 in Washington, DC. In a memoir published last month, Wynn-Williams detailed allegations of misconduct and sexual harassment at Facebook and claimed the company undermined U.S. national security in dealings with the Chinese government.   Win McNamee/Getty Images/AFP (Photo by WIN MCNAMEE / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)
Sarah Wynn-Williams, former Director of Global Public Policy at Facebook, is sworn in before testifying during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on 9 April 2025 in Washington, DCWin McNamee / Getty Images / AFP

Sarah Wynn-Williams, former Director of Global Public Policy at Facebook, is sworn in before testifying during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on 9 April 2025 in Washington, DC

Win McNamee / Getty Images / AFP

Is your cellphone listening to you?

Chatting about a recent camping trip with workmates then your feed is full of outdoorsy getaways? How and why does that happen?

LinkedInfluencers: Kiwis acing the ‘ick’ social media platform

The networking and social media site gets a bad rap as the place for self-promotion. However, active users swear by LinkedIn’s benefits, professional and otherwise.

Mr. Nobody Against Putin is a warning about Russia’s slide into militarisation, says director David Borenstein

“They’re just openly telling and teaching their kids, prepare for a new generation of warfare and empire.”

Her ex-bosses at Meta (the parent company of Facebook) have threated legal action if she does anything to promote the memoir She faces a fine of US$50,000 (NZ$84,300) every time she speaks disparagingly about the company, The Telegraph reported.

Meta warned that her planned appearance at the Hay Festival would breach the conditions.

She appeared on stage with investigative journalist Carole Cadwalladr and academic Tim Wu at the event, who wrote a book about Silicon Valley.

Introducing the panel, The Guardian reported that Cadwalladr said: “I think this might be a Hay first, in which we have an author in a hostage situation. Blink once if you can hear us, Sarah, twice if [Mark] Zuckerberg is an asshole.”

Wu called the lawsuit a “machine reaction, not a personal vendetta”, BBC reported.

He accused Meta of “maximising the punishment” as a warning to any other would-be Meta whistleblowers and described the action as “censorship”.

“This is performative,” Cadwalladr said.

Meta told the BCC claims they were trying to silence her “is not what’s happening here”.

“There is a binding interim arbitration award against Ms Wynn-Williams which she agreed to during her time at Meta and which explicitly prohibits her from promoting her book,” it said.

Helen Bagnall, Hay Festival’s programmes director, told the audience: “Since Sarah Wynn-Williams’s Meta exposé Careless People was published in March 2025, she has faced immense legal pressure. Today, on the advice of lawyers, she is unable to speak, but she joins us on stage.”

Wynn-Williams was the former global policy director for Facebook, now owned by founder Mark Zuckerberg’s parent company Meta, from 2011 to 2017.

Her book recounted her experiences working for the company, including accusations of sexual harassment by a long-time Facebook executive and claims the company explored breaking into the Chinese market by appeasing government censors there.

Meta won a court order barring Wynn-Williams from promoting Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed and Lost Idealism or from making derogatory statements about Facebook shortly after it was released.

At issue was whether her book breached what was believed to be anti-disparagement provisions in her severance agreement with the company.

In March 2025, an RNZ interview with Wynn-Williams was cancelled after Meta banned her from doing interviews about it.

Meta provided a statement to RNZ in which it called the book “a mix of out-of-date and previously reported claims about the company and false accusations about our executives”.

Get weekly Life highlights

Our editors pick the best of food, arts, culture and lifestyle. Delivered straight to your inbox every Saturday.

Sign up for the Life newsletter now

Sociologist: ‘I found myself getting hit on by my chatbot’

Although he’d set his experimental AI companion Jasmine to “friend” mode, James Muldoon says she soon turned amorous.

How to get yourself out of a reading rut

Has a screen stolen your love of books and left you in a no book zone you can’t get out of? 

‘Just so much pain’ – Christine Dawood on losing her husband and son in the Titan disaster

Psychologist Christine Dawood tells of moving through absolute devastation to find a new purpose in the memoir 96 Hours.

Famesick: Lena Dunham makes us laugh about a dream job turned brutal nightmare

Lena Dunham’s searingly funny, shockingly honest memoir reveals how Hollywood culture allows pretty much anything, except human frailty.

Other Life sections:

Ngā papa whakaata/Screens

Āhua noho/Lifestyle

Whanaungatanga/Relationships