It wasn’t just fact-checking that Meta scrapped from its platforms as it prepares for the second Trump administration.
With Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg crying for more 'masculine energy' in the workplace, we've entered the Golden Age of insecure twits.
The move risks emboldening and amplifying hate speech, particularly toward LGBTQ users, who often rely on the online platforms as a lifeline to vital support.
Michael McConnell fears the decision by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg to eliminate fact-checking will not work and argues the decision appears to reflect primarily parochial political concerns irrespective of the roughly 90% of Facebook's 3 billion monthly active users.
Complaints from Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel and other tech billionaires are obviously self-serving and based in personal resentment.
It was such a busy week for Meta that even the most steadfast Zuckerberg news junkies might have missed some of his transformative decisions. Here's a recap of all the changes a man with the net worth of over $200 billion made to one of the most powerful and influential tech companies in the world just a week before Trump takes office.
I really, really wanted to like Mark Zuckerberg’s gushing appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast last Friday. Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, Facebook’s parent company, made some important points about the inadequacies of fact-checking as well as the troubling ways that governments can manipulate private companies.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced sweeping layoffs of what he refers to as "low-performers" at his empire.
Leaked training materials reviewed by Platformer and The Intercept reveal that moderators are now instructed to allow posts calling LGBTQ+ people “mentally ill” and denying the existence of transgender individuals.
After visiting President-elect Donald J. Trump in November, Mr. Zuckerberg decided to relax Meta’s speech policies. He asked a small team to carry out his goals within weeks. The repercussions are just beginning.
In a separate but related development flagged by the publication 404 Media, Meta deleted the “trans” and “nonbinary” themes from its Messenger app this week. Themes allow users to change the appearance of chat windows, such as by altering the color or design.
Mark Zuckerberg just days after the 2016 election ... The social media giant has also loosened its rules around hate speech and abuse — again following the lead of Elon Musk's X — specifically ...