Supreme Court eyes government contacts with social media platforms
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday was hearing arguments in another battle over social media content moderation.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday was hearing arguments in another battle over social media content moderation.
After lower courts delivered conflicting rulings, the Supreme Court heard two issues on Monday that are related to contentious laws imposing social media limits in Texas and Florida.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s Facebook and Instagram accounts have been restricted by Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta due to ongoing violations of policies targeting potentially dangerous individuals and groups.
Facebook has spent 20 years online but the platform’s success has also fueled concerns at the highest levels of government.
Tech chief executives of social media companies were grilled during a Senate hearing over their failure to protect children exploitation.
ChatGPT was well on its way to becoming a household name even before 2023 kicked off.
Many ultra-wealthy public figures have an inexhaustible reservoir of self-preservation that is only a millimeter underneath their perceived altruistic exterior.
Meta has announced that their social media platform Threads is now available in Europe.
A former Atlanta Facebook global diversity executive has admitted to stealing over $4 million from the company.
Meta said they will now be using end-to-end encryption for messages and calls on Messenger and Facebook.