Sheryl Sandberg On Facebook’s Latest Effort To Get 4 Billion People Online

Think there are already a ton of people on Facebook? Think again.

Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg sat down with Arianna on HuffPost Live at Davos Friday to discuss the social network’s initiative, internet.org, which seeks to bring online resources, like Facebook and Wikipedia, to areas of the world that aren’t connected to the Internet yet.

According to recent research by McKinsey & Co., 4.4 billion people don’t have Internet access.

“It’s really exciting because we believe that when people see the power of data, they will improve their lives,” Sandberg said. “And we see that all over the world.”

Sandberg stressed the importance of bringing these resources to women, who are well poised to pass technology on to the next generation.

“We know the benefits of getting women connected are at least as good as the benefits of getting men connected, and possibly, and probably, more,” she said.

Below, live updates from the 2015 Davos Annual Meeting:

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“It took us 13 years to get lead out of gasoline because of our children’s brains. When are we going to get the carbon out of the atmosphere? It’s a toxin… It’s obvious to anybody with half a whit.”

“This is a fundamental issue of human rights and of intelligence for the future,” he added.

“We think it’s about a ,000 a year savings,” Bertolini said, noting his company’s health care costs actually went down after implementing mindfulness practices.

Mark Bertolini said a number of CEOs at Davos have asked him how he made the major changes at his company.

“Not everybody should be at an hour, there may be people who need to be higher,” Bertolini said, noting people’s lifestyles are directly impacted by how they are paid.

Mark Bertolini, CEO of Aetna, explained how he increased wages for his workers, arguing that taking better care of his employees would in turn lead to better care for Aetna’s customers.

“We started to say, well, that’s going to take away some of their benefits… so we also made a benefits change,” Bertolini said.

“I think it is useful and important for people to imagine, ‘where’s my food coming from?'” Mack said.

“What people don’t appreciate is just how intensive agriculture is around the world,” Mack added.

“Transparency.. is getting pretty tightly wound together with labeling,” Mack said.

Mack said people in the U.S. have “failed to appreciate” that labeling was always done for the purposes of safety, and argued that GMO labeling isn’t typically done because GMOs aren’t deemed unsafe.

Michael Mack, CEO of Syngenta, said some of the debate over food technologies like GMOs is “Western luxury.”

The Huffington Post