"Zuckerberg Sold Out America to the CCP for Profit," Former Facebook Employee Sarah Wynne-Williams Exposes
- Alfred 정현 Kim
- Apr 11
- 3 min read

On April 10, 2025, a bombshell testimony unfolded at a U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, where Sarah Wynne-Williams, former Director of Global Public Policy at Facebook (now Meta), exposed shocking revelations. Having worked closely with Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg from 2011 to 2017, Wynne-Williams accused Facebook of secretly collaborating with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), jeopardizing U.S. national security and user privacy. Her testimony detailed how Facebook planned to hand over American user data to China and repeatedly lied to Congress to cover it up.
Wynne-Williams revealed that Facebook began covert operations in China as early as 2014. Through a secretive initiative dubbed "Project Aldrin," known only to a select few insiders, the company developed tailored censorship tools and offered user data to the CCP. She claimed this effort built an $18 billion business in China, a fact corroborated by Meta’s own SEC filings, which list China as its second-largest market.
Among the most alarming disclosures was Facebook’s plan to construct a data pipeline linking the U.S. and China, which could have granted the CCP backdoor access to American citizens’ private messages and data. Wynne-Williams said internal warnings about the risks were ignored, and only Congressional intervention halted the project. She stressed that Facebook’s reckless pursuit of this plan persisted despite the dangers.
Wynne-Williams also exposed Facebook’s compliance with CCP demands to silence dissent. In 2017, at the request of Chinese authorities, the company deleted the account of Guo Wengui, a Chinese dissident living in the U.S. When questioned about this in a Senate hearing, Facebook’s general counsel claimed it was a routine decision, denying any Chinese pressure. Wynne-Williams called this an “outright lie,” backing her claim with internal documents. She further revealed that Facebook deployed censorship tools in Hong Kong and Taiwan, targeting posts with over 10,000 views to suppress democratic movements and political discourse.
The leak of AI technology to China raised additional concerns. Wynne-Williams stated that Facebook’s open-source AI model, Llama, contributed to the development of China’s DeepSeek AI model. She testified that, starting in 2015, Facebook provided the CCP with AI briefings aimed at helping China surpass American companies, a move that could bolster China’s military AI capabilities.
On user data, Facebook planned to store information on Chinese servers, granting the CCP access not only to Chinese, Hong Kong, and Taiwanese users but also potentially exposing American data. Wynne-Williams criticized the company for knowingly accepting these risks in pursuit of profit.
Despite Zuckerberg’s public claims of championing free speech, Wynne-Williams dismissed this as hypocrisy. She accused him of orchestrating censorship in China, suppressing dissent in the U.S., and lying to Congress. His recent attempt to rebrand as a free speech advocate, she argued, is merely “another costume” he dons to suit his quest for power.
Wynne-Williams disclosed intense pressure from Meta following her revelations. The company filed lawsuits worth hundreds of millions against her and secured a gag order through forced arbitration to silence her, even prohibiting her from speaking to Congress. She expressed outrage, questioning, “Is this the behavior of a company that claims to support free speech?”
Sen. Josh Hawley, who chaired the hearing, lambasted Zuckerberg, declaring, “He betrayed American interests and tried to sell out user data.” Hawley demanded that Zuckerberg “come forward and tell the truth” under oath, vowing further investigations into Meta. Wynne-Williams’ courageous testimony paints Facebook not as a mere social media platform but as a potential threat to national security and democracy. Her revelations demand a thorough reckoning with Meta and Zuckerberg’s actions, likely sparking global repercussions.
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