The Lawsuit That Never Was (But Should’ve Been)

In the latest episode of “Wait, What Did I Just Read?”, the internet briefly lost its collective mind over a headline claiming Mark Zuckerberg sued himself. That’s right—Zuck vs. Zuck. The ultimate boss battle. The final form of corporate accountability.

Why the Headline Worked (And Why It’s Hilarious)

Imagining the Courtroom: Zuck v. Zuck

Case Title: Zuckerberg v. Zuckerberg
Court: United States District Court for the Northern District of Existential Crisis

Allegations

  • Violation of personal privacy
  • Emotional distress
  • Unlawful data harvesting

Defense

  • Clicked “Accept All Cookies” in 2004
  • Claims lawsuit is a distraction

Witnesses Called to the Stand

  • Sheryl Sandberg
  • The Facebook Algorithm
  • Hologram of Steve Jobs

The Judge: ChatGPT-9000

“Let’s circle back and unpack the synergy between the plaintiff and the defendant. Also, have you tried ayahuasca?”

The Fallout: Meta Stock Reacts

  • #ZuckOnZuckCrime
  • #MetaMeltdown
  • #SueTheMirror

The Real Meta Drama

Meta has faced real lawsuits over antitrust, privacy, and misinformation—but never against itself.

Expert Analysis: The Psychology of Self-Suing

“Zuckerberg suing himself is the logical outcome of a man who built a digital universe, populated it with avatars, and still couldn’t find someone to disagree with him.”

Closing Arguments

“I built the Metaverse to escape reality. I didn’t expect reality to sue me.”

Final Thoughts

This satire works because it exaggerates the self-referential nature of tech culture. Sometimes, the only person left to sue… is yourself.

Want More?

Subscribe to our newsletter, “404: Humor Not Found,” for weekly doses of digital absurdity, jokes, and CEO roasts.

Thank you for your vote!
Post rating: 0 from 5 (according 0 votes)
What's your reaction?
0Ecstatic0Cheerful0Content0Meh0Downcast0Heartbroken