Meta received a authorized victory on Wednesday towards a former worker who printed an explosive, tell-all memoir, as an arbitrator briefly prohibited the creator from selling or additional distributing copies.
Sarah Wynn-Williams final week launched “Careless Individuals: A Cautionary Story of Energy, Greed, and Misplaced Idealism,” a guide that describes a sequence of incendiary allegations of sexual harassment and different inappropriate conduct by senior executives throughout her tenure on the firm. Meta pursued arbitration, arguing that the guide is prohibited below a nondisparagement contract she signed as a world affairs worker.
Throughout an emergency listening to on Wednesday, the arbitrator, Nicholas Gowen, discovered that Meta had offered sufficient grounds that Ms. Wynn-Williams had doubtlessly violated her contract, in keeping with a authorized submitting posted by Meta. The 2 events will now start personal arbitration.
Along with halting guide promotions and gross sales, Ms. Wynn-Williams should chorus from participating in or “amplifying any additional disparaging, crucial or in any other case detrimental feedback,” in keeping with the submitting. She additionally should retract all earlier disparaging feedback “to the extent inside her management.”
The submitting doesn’t restrict the writer, Flatiron Books, or its father or mother firm, Macmillan, from persevering with publication of the memoir, a spokeswoman for Macmillan mentioned, including that the corporate will proceed to advertise the guide.
“We’re appalled by Meta’s techniques to silence our creator by way of the usage of a nondisparagement clause in a severance settlement,” the spokeswoman, Marlena Bittner, mentioned. “The guide went by way of an intensive enhancing and vetting course of, and we stay dedicated to publishing necessary books comparable to this.”
Meta has vehemently denied the allegations within the guide.
The guide is a “mixture of out-of-date and beforehand reported claims concerning the firm and false accusations about our executives,” a Meta spokesman, Andy Stone, mentioned in a press release. Ms. Wynn-Williams was fired for poor efficiency, he added, and an investigation on the time decided that “she made deceptive and unfounded allegations of harassment.”
A spokesman for Ms. Wynn-Williams, who labored at what was then referred to as Fb from 2011 to 2017, didn’t remark.
The transfer to publish the arbitration submitting is one among Meta’s most forceful public repudiations of a former worker’s tell-all memoir, a number of of which have been printed over the previous 20 years.
Meta executives have additionally responded on-line to Ms. Wynn-Williams’s claims, calling most of them wildly exaggerated or flat-out false.
It’s unclear whether or not Meta’s makes an attempt to claw again Ms. Wynn-Williams’s guide will in the end achieve success. In 2023, the Nationwide Labor Relations Board dominated that it’s usually unlawful for firms to supply severance agreements that prohibit staff from making doubtlessly disparaging statements about former employers, together with discussing sexual harassment or sexual assault accusations.
In a Meta shareholder report in 2022, the corporate’s board of administrators mentioned that it didn’t require staff “to stay silent about harassment or discrimination,” and that the corporate “strictly prohibits retaliation towards any personnel” for talking up on these points.