And earlier this month, Meta — which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp — claiming Trump’s victory shows that Americans ...
Meta overhauled its approach to US moderation on Tuesday, ditching fact-checking, announcing a plan to move its trust and ...
Hive is partnering with the Internet Watch Foundation, a U.K.-based child safety nonprofit, to better detect child sexual ...
YouTube's ads frustrate users, with misleading and explicit content affecting both children and adults, despite Google’s ...
Meta has started testing ads on Threads, its new social network, with selected brands in the US and Japan. This move follows ...
The social-media giant’s loosening of speech restrictions is unsettling advertisers, who say a decade of efforts to protect ...
Meta's removal of fact-checking reshapes digital trust and responsibility. What it means for creators, audiences, and the future of content moderation.
In Ryan v. X Corp., a Northern District of California court held that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act immunized ...
Meta’s recent changes to its content moderation policies raise significant concerns regarding the proliferation of misinformation, hate speech, and extremist content on its platforms.
Meta execs meet advertisers to discuss changes in content policies, including removal of third-party fact-checkers.
However, the timing has drawn criticism, coming shortly after Meta relaxed its content moderation policies and ended its US fact-checking programme. These decisions, interpreted by many as an ...