Mark Zuckerberg set the internet abuzz this week when the Meta CEO announced that the tech giant would no longer conduct ...
The White House on Friday refused to comment on tech giant Meta's shock announcement earlier this week that it was ending its third-party fact-checking program in the United States.
Meta announced this week it was ending third-party fact-checking and moving towards community notes. Some experts fear it could lead to a rise in health misinformation.
Meta’s official rationale for ending its independent factchecking in favour of crowdsourced contributions centres on ...
As Meta moves away from fact-checking, HEC Paris professor David Restrepo Amariles warns of fake news' risks for businesses, ...
Every Friday, Covers takes a look back at the week that was in the sports betting industry. With a collection of sports ...
Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg just happened to decide that this was the week to announce that it was “time to get back to our ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that third-party fact checkers will be replaced by "community notes" on Facebook and ...
In other words, Meta will no longer rely on external organizations to review and verify the accuracy of content shared on its platforms, which include Threads, Instagram, and Facebook. Instead, users ...
Americans do many things well, and one of those things is manufacturing. Output is near record levels, even after a trade war ...
Fact-checking is essential, but leaving it to social media platforms risks undermining democracy and suppressing diverse voices.