This “strike” system will hit users whose posts or comments break the rules, but some strikes will hit harder than others.
Meta's stock prices soared this week despite its revenues dipping for the third straight quarter in a row. What gives?
The news comes just months after the company's first ever round of mass layoffs and a rocky 2022 in which Mark Zuckerberg doubled down on the metaverse.
The Artifact app is being released based on TikTok's algorithmic approach, creating another place users can share news and info with friends.
The Elon Musk-owned company dropped the CoTweets feature Tuesday after just six months of testing.
AI voice generator company ElevenLabs said it may backtrack on its open platform after reports its AI was used to deepfake Joe Rogan, Justin Roiland, and more.
The man who’s known for Holocaust denial and racist great replacement nonsense was again banned after he praised Hitler and the Unabomber in a Twitter Space.
Twitter finally reversed the decision to make the algorithmic ‘For You’ tab default. The thing is, Twitter had already come to the same conclusion years ago.
Nick Fuentes is back on Twitter, but his personal groupie ‘groyper’ influencers on Instagram use low-key memes and phrases to keep off the moderators’ radar.
Meta's rolling out new encryption features on its app over the next few months, though it will randomly upgrade individual chats over time.
Quiet Mode will temporarily pause notifications and send an auto reply to other users letting them know the tool is on.
The social media platform cut access from third-party apps like Tweetbot and Twitterific earlier this month with no real explanation.
After Instagram incorrectly removed two posts fundraising for gender-affirming surgery, the watchdog group says Meta should change its moderation rules.
Two social media experts—a law professor and a journalism professor—describe how to bring transparency and accountability to the industry.
The company allegedly took that data and sold it to clients promising them powerful social media surveillance of potential targets.
The apps' developers say the social media company hasn't yet responded to their concerns.
After days of silence, the social media platform said it had conducted a "thorough investigation" and found "no evidence" of any associated breach.
Making sense of all the badges you're seeing on your timeline.
With a billion dollars a year in interest payments alone, Twitter is ruffling through every couch cushion in the house for a little spare change.
That doesn't seem to be a problem at Parler, though. On Tuesday, the right-wing social networking company cheerily posted that it was "better than ever."