The company is limiting results returned for for covid-related keywords to one link from a single source: the CDC.
The coordinated campaign erroneously claimed the US military possesses the ability to harness and weaponize floods, droughts, and volcanic eruptions.
The social media platform trained its new machine-learning algorithm on approximately 5 billion photos of people with different body types and skin tones.
Meta's Oversight Board rejected the initial removal of three heated posts about abortion laws, which the company called "death threats."
Facebook's news tab will disappear in early December while Meta claims the majority of users won't be affected.
The plan comes at a time when Facebook and Instagram are staring down the EU’s Digital Services Act and its ad transparency requirements.
The new Twitter, AKA ‘X’, privacy policy states that the site may collect users' biometric information—likely a face scan to prove they’re really human.
The company that was recently rebranded as X claims it will have a moderation team for political ads on its platform.
Content creators can now take an educational course if a video violates YouTube guidelines.
Meta found 7,704 accounts and 954 pages on Facebook and Instagram boosting pro-China content and criticizing US policies.
Gizmodo’s tests found the higher-ed gatekeeper shares GPAs, SAT information, and other data with big tech.
Without much in the way of details, Google said it would update its transparency centers for EU users to show why they see ads, or why content gets taken down.
The EU gave social media platforms until August 25 to comply with the Digital Services Act resulting in Meta taking new "transparency measures."
Twitter, or ‘X,’ would remove both the headline and text on article links as Musk tries to push 'journalists' to report exclusively on his app.
After releasing Threads prematurely to fill in the vacuum left behind by Elon Musk's dying Twitter, Meta has finally released the platform's web app.
Friends of Friends is replacing the app's Discovery feed and allows you to see what people with one degree of separation are doing.
Don't leave your precious media trapped inside app silos.
A judge said nonwhite creators who sued YouTube "do not come close" to proving racially biased algorithms were responsible for their videos getting taken down.
Influencers typically receive $150+ for promotional videos, making Amazon's offer of $25 to review products on its 'Inspire' shopping site outrageous.
Colleen Ballinger's ukulele song, Sienna Mae Gomez's interpretive dance, and Jeffree Star's voguing are only the tip of the iceberg.