Mark Zuckerberg has been fighting recently against Facebook's many privacy scandals. After the Cambridge Analytica scandal of 2016, in which millions of users were exposed, Mark Zuckerberg's content appeared in the trash after it was published in the New York Times.

The post says the story of Jake Orta, a veteran of a small apartment three blocks from Zuckerberg's house, who searches the garbage every day to earn a living, that one day he went to the home of the founder of Facebook Which is worth $ 10 million, to see what he might find in the garbage bin outside, where he returned to the place again and again.
According to Jake Orta, there are two boxes outside the home of Mark Zuckerberg: one recycled blue and the other white. The elements he found in them are as follows:
- Coffee machine (which worked).
- Vacuum Cleaner Robot (which worked).
- Hair dryer (which works).
- Root beer cans of A & W.
- Junk mail.
- Dinner items (chicken).
- A stick of hard bread.
- Several boxes of Chinese food.
At one point in the report, Orta was said to be putting a black suitcase aside and saying, "Here there is only junk mail, nothing." As the newspaper notes, this beggar is not the only case. In fact, it is very common to find people inspecting others' waste to find things that can be resold even though in California they are considered illegal.
- Coffee machine (which worked).
- Vacuum Cleaner Robot (which worked).
- Hair dryer (which works).
- Root beer cans of A & W.
- Junk mail.
- Dinner items (chicken).
- A stick of hard bread.
- Several boxes of Chinese food.
At one point in the report, Orta was said to be putting a black suitcase aside and saying, "Here there is only junk mail, nothing." As the newspaper notes, this beggar is not the only case. In fact, it is very common to find people inspecting others' waste to find things that can be resold even though in California they are considered illegal.