Photo: Phillip Faraone/Getty; Rob Latour/REX/Shutterstock

Jim Carreyis criticizing Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg yet again.
Facebook hasdenied this allegation, as well as a variety of others made in the report.
In the new cartoon, Carrey appears to have drawn himself looking red-faced and angry, and not Zuckerberg
“Hey #Zuckerborg. We know who you are. And we saw what you did,” hewrote, adding a link to theNew York Timesstory.
“Here’s a little message from me in your native language,” he wrote, before adding in a string of binary numbers that may look like just 1s and 0s to most people, but translates to f— you,” according toThe Hill.
While Carrey has gained notoriety recently for his political cartoons skeweringDonald Trump‘s Administration, this isn’t the first time he’sgone after Zuckerberg.
In March, the actor posted a cartoonish portrait he sketched of the tech mogul, 33, along with the caption, “Who are you sharing your life with?” and the hashtag #regulatefacebook.
The black and white image, which Carreyposted in colorthe previous month, was updated to include Zuckerberg’s infamous quote, “They trust me, dumb f—-!” which he allegedly said in 2004 in reference to Facebook users at Harvard, according toBusiness Insider.
Carrey reposted the sketch just days afterThe ObserverandThe New York Timesrevealed that the social media network covertlyshared the information of 50 million userswith the political research group Cambridge Analytica, which worked for Trump’s presidential campaign. The reports have sparked widespread outrage among users and politicians in the U.S. and the U.K.
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TheAce Venturaactor began painting about six years ago, and has been demonstrating his political beliefsthrough his artwork. Carrey rarely explicitly names the subjects of his portraits but many appear to be prominent political figures. Over the past couple years, Carrey has taken to social media to share some of his pieces, which have generated praise, condemnation and everything in between.
At the Television Critics Association summer press tour in August, Carrey explained that hestarted drawing the cartoonsas a way to express himself in reaction to what is happening around the world.
“I’m doing cartoons because I can’t just watch this nightmare unfold. I have to alchemize it into something that is at least creative and decent. Even if it’s crass at times, I’m expressing the crass that everyone wants to express,” he said. “When I stick a flag in Trump’s ass, that is what everyone is seeing, they’re seeing him owned. I have to express that sometimes in the most crass way I can express that because I’m done with that, I’m done with liars.”
source: people.com