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.
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 ...
A number of prominent companies have scaled back or set aside the diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives that much of ...
HydroX AI CEO warns about LLM vulnerabilities, new Open Weight Definition for AI, U.S. and EU go opposite directions on hate speech.
CEO Maria Zhang, Chief Scientist Steve Liu, and CTO Tim Howes. (Polana Photos) A onetime Seattle startup founder who ...
Meta is working on implementing community notes on Instagram and Threads. Shortly after CEO Mark Zuckerberg's big pivot away from fact checking and into community notes, Meta's Threads and Instagram ...
In an exclusive interview with WIRED, celebrated intellectual property lawyer Mark Lemley elaborates on why he quit and what ...
Wealthy people have always had a louder voice, but Trump’s new allies represent the starkest consolidation of wealth in US ...
Two of America’s Big Tech companies are opening the door to more “free expression,” even if it means more hateful content. But in Europe, Big Tech companies are voluntarily cracking down.
Meta recently ended its diversity, equity and inclusion programs. That same day, CEO Mark Zuckerberg appeared on Joe Rogan’s podcast, claiming that he had been working on these company shifts “for a ...
Seven families are suing TikTok in France, accusing the platform of failing to moderate harmful content and exposing children ...