Big Tech Accountability Depends on Better Protection for Whistleblowers

Region: Global
Category: Whistleblowing and Technology
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Big Tech Accountability Depends on Better Protection for Whistleblowers (Report)

Written by Mia Marzotto and published by The Signals Network
Date Published: 3 March 2024


TSN’s Legal Team examines how, in an industry (Tech) where transparency is almost non-existent and regulation is hard to enforce, whistleblowers have become a fundamental source of light for those seeking to understand and mitigate the impact the companies are having on our daily lives.

However, they have done so at great personal risk and often without the support needed to ensure their safety. They have faced financial ruin, suffered emotional trauma and the loss of family and friends, and even been doxed by their employers, having to flee for their physical safety, writes the report’s author, Whistleblower Protection Program Manager Mia Marzotto.

The report outlines how there is a need to:

  1. Empowetech workers to know and understand their rights.
  1. Strengthen support systems for tech workers who do speak out.
  1. Amplify whistleblowers’ voices to ensure their disclosures have impact, thereby sending a signal to others that they too can safely disclose.
  1. Strengthen legal protections to better protect those who speak out.

The report comes as tech giants such as Google, Apple and Meta are forced to make substantial changes to their operations to comply with new regulations around the world to encourage competition in the digital economy and protect certain users from unauthorized data-sharing and targeted advertising practices, among other goals.

Governments across the world agree that Big Tech needs to be regulated and held accountable just like other behemoth industries of the modern world such as the auto industry and banking. However, the only way they can effectively regulate it is to understand these tech companies from the inside.

That’s why tech whistleblowers need to be acknowledged as key sources of information for regulators and the public, and why those whistleblowers should feel safe, supported and protected to speak out for the welfare of society. - The Signals Network