A post that cast doubt on the covid-19 vaccine was the platform's most viewed link in the first quarter of 2021.
It's never seemed less safe to surf the web. Here are some things to think about to keep from getting hacked... maybe. Nothing is certain in life.
App developers caught selling off your data could get fined for millions—or wind up in jail.
The company announced that it was further delaying in-person work, which had been scheduled to resume in October.
It would take the company from being a business that only tracks you most of the time into one that's virtually inescapable.
During the livestream, the man said he was looking for “all my other patriots to come out and help me, because I’m here, I’ve got the foundation started.”
The FTC has refiled its antitrust lawsuit against Facebook, arguing that no other social media company "remotely approaches Facebook’s scale."
Facebook's Horizon Workrooms is available today as a free beta on the Oculus Quest 2.
In spite of Facebook's history of fudging figures, the company promises that this report is totally transparent and totally factual. Totally.
“The fuels conditions are worse than we’ve ever seen, the fire behavior is worse than we’ve ever seen," a firefighter commander said.
Facebook decided to add the new end-to-end encryption option to Messenger in light of the increase in audio and video calls in the recent year.
For the second week in a row, Facebook killed a project meant to shed light on its practices.
The forum discussion platform is test driving a new short-form video feed in its iOS app.
You can't take everything off the platform, but photos, posts, and events are a start.
WhatsApp said in a statement that Apple's latest iOS feature introduces "something very concerning into the world.”
The FTC fired back (sort of) but plans to take no further action.
The ultra-wealthy are buying residency and citizenship in New Zealand to hedge against the apocalypse.
Companies like Shell and Exxon spent more than $9 million advertising on the platform in 2020.
Facebook's attempt to invoke "privacy" appears entirely bogus.
Cramer describes Facebook's vision for the metaverse with lots of metaphors. None of them make sense.