Mark Zuckerberg has been busy. Last week, he announced his future plans for Meta, which included halting all independent fact-checking efforts and relaxing moderation of anti-LGBTQ+ hate speech. Through the days that followed,
Billionaire Jeff Bezos arrived hand-in-hand with fiancée Lauren Sánchez to President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration on Monday. Yet it was Sánchez’s choice of outfit that immediately stole the show as some MAGA commentators blasted that she “forgot to put a shirt on.
Mark Zuckerberg appeared on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast and shared that X, formerly known as Twitter, “just did it better than us” when it came to stopping the spread of disinformation ...
The co-founder of Facebook (now Meta) has become a social media icon. He doesn’t seem as reserved, measured, or rehearsed as he did in the past, preferring a more trendy style and upbeat demeanor. In recent months, he has also ditched his traditional gray shirts for a more eclectic wardrobe. He seems to be ditching a lot of other things as well.
No, Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t get to pretend he’s a free speech champion as if there were nothing he could have done to stop the censorship at Facebook that rigged the 2020 election and probably
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's sweeping changes at his company and its services will negatively affect women and the LGBTQ+ community.
Mark Zuckerberg told the world how he really feels about Apple as a company and a brand. Spoiler alert: he didn't have anything nice to say.
Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and other tech leaders are providing Trump with a warmer welcome to the White House than eight years ago.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he decided to end Facebook and Instagram's fact-checking operation because it too closely resembled "1984"
But Zuckerberg's announcement that Facebook and Instagram will soon cease fact-checking is such a stellar model of villainous doublespeak that George Orwell would have thought it was a bit much. Zuckerberg insisted it's in the name of "free speech" that he must unleash uncontrolled disinformation on his platform,
If you had any doubt that Meta was changing to please the new president, that's over now, Peter Kafka writes.