Ruiz — Mashable Rebecca
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Why does Ruiz matter? Because she proved that tech journalism does not have to be stenography for press releases. At a time when "pivot to video" was killing long-form text, Ruiz’s stories consistently broke traffic records—because readers were starving for reporting that treated them as complex humans, not just users. mashable rebecca ruiz
When she brought that skill set to Mashable, she didn’t abandon the rigor. Instead, she turned the lens inward on Silicon Valley. Ruiz asked a question few were asking in 2016: What is the internet doing to our brains? Ruiz’s work at Mashable is best understood through three distinct pillars that she effectively owned. 1. The Workplace Trauma of Content Moderation Long before Frances Haugen blew the whistle on Facebook, Ruiz was writing about the human ghosts in the machine. Her deep dive into the lives of Facebook’s content moderators—the people paid to watch beheadings, child abuse, and animal torture so the rest of us don’t have to—is considered a seminal piece in tech journalism. That writer is