A wave of dissent is sweeping through Meta’s workplace. Workers at multiple U.S. locations launched a coordinated protest on May 12, distributing informational materials opposing mouse-tracking technology the tech giant recently implemented across employee workstations.
The protest flyers appeared strategically throughout office spaces — conference rooms, break areas, vending stations, and even bathroom facilities. The approach was deliberately visible.
The company has justified the monitoring system by explaining it requires authentic data showing typical computer interactions — including clicks, scroll patterns, and interface navigation — to develop AI models that can execute routine digital tasks.
Meta Platforms, Inc., META
This rationale hasn’t satisfied the workforce.
The timing of these protests is particularly significant. Meta recently unveiled intentions to slash its employee count by 10%, and staff members are connecting the monitoring data directly to potential automation that might eliminate their positions.
Both the physical flyers and digital petition cite the National Labor Relations Act, emphasizing that federal law protects workers when they collectively address employment conditions.
This strategic legal reference elevates the situation — invoking labor legislation indicates this represents more than grievances; it’s an organized resistance effort.
META stock gained 0.69% during the reporting period. The company’s price-to-earnings ratio stands at 21.92, approaching its historical floor of 20.88, which market watchers interpret as potentially undervalued territory based on earnings performance.
The GF Score assigns META a 98 out of 100 rating, awarding maximum 10/10 scores in both profitability and growth metrics, alongside an 8/10 financial strength assessment.
Analyst sentiment remains predominantly positive. Among 38 professionals tracking the stock, 31 recommend buying while seven suggest holding. The consensus target price reaches $817.71, representing roughly 36% appreciation potential from present trading levels.
A potential red flag: company insiders have divested $107.8 million in META shares during the last three months, with zero insider purchases recorded.
Meta’s current market capitalization hovers around $1.53 trillion.
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