Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, is denying that users were ever forced to follow the accounts of President Donald Trump and others in his administration following his inauguration.
Explore how tech giant, Meta, navigates policies under Trump’s administration, redefining trust and the future of the creator economy.
There’s no official ruling on the collective noun for a group of billionaires, but if ever we needed one it was this week, writes Ange Lavoipierre.
Just a few weeks ago, Mark Zuckerberg made a big announcement about shifting content moderation on Meta platforms — he’s getting rid of fact-checking in favor of crowdsourced community notes, and his ...
Former president Joe Biden’s reign in the Oval Office was completely removed from the Google search results for the term “US ...
Some Facebook, Instagram and Threads users are wondering whether to delete their accounts after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s ...
A number of prominent companies have scaled back or set aside the diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives that much of ...
The presidential pardon for the more than 1,500 arrested in the riot — including those who attacked police officers or were convicted for crimes such as seditious conspiracy — is an utterly depressing ...
HydroX AI CEO warns about LLM vulnerabilities, new Open Weight Definition for AI, U.S. and EU go opposite directions on hate speech.
Parents in France and the US are suing TikTok, accusing the platform of promoting harmful content that contributed to teen ...
After an emotional rollercoaster, TikTok is back, but there may still be repercussions for those who distribute the app.
Trump's virtual appearance at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos was full of promises and threats.