The Robert F. Kennedy Jr.-founded org Children’s Health Defense had failed to meet Meta’s standards ‘on misinformation that could cause physical harm.’
The shout-out app that lets users send their friends a birthday greeting directly from Rudy Giuliani is expanding to allow for extended, two-way chats.
Self-proclaimed influencer Borja Escalona said he wasn't sorry, promised to be “10 times worse” on new YouTube channels after his video outraged Spain.
The new feature includes content generated by national associations to connect users with authoritative political information and resources.
Meta has hundreds of staff working on midterm election integrity, though shortcomings in other countries call into question the company's effectiveness.
If you can't name that tune yourself, there's help at hand.
Instagram steals from Snapchat, then Facebook steals from Instagram, and around and around we go.
A Spanish YouTuber told a server he "only eats free things" on a livestream, then he said he'd charge $2,500 for "promotion" after she asked him to pay anyway.
The company has reportedly said the privacy boost is unrelated to a widely publicized Nebraska abortion case, but the timing is certainly interesting.
"Family Center" allows parents to see who their teens are communicating with, if their kids consent to that sort of thing, first.
Meta announced several new features for the popular messaging app.
Top Kenyatta officials said their national cohesion watchdog's ultimatum threatening to suspend the social network went too far.
Researchers analyzed more than 21 billion Facebook friendships and found low-income kids with high income friends tended to have higher incomes as adults.
Kenya's national cohesion watchdog has threatened to suspend the social network from the country in a week if it doesn't mitigate hate speech.
Twitter's monthly subscription service has just raised its price.
The company reportedly intends to end contracts with news publishers, which pays them for the content that ends up in the Facebook News tab.
The social media platform is testing out a "status" feature that lets users select from a pre-set menu of vibes(?) to accompany each post.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in an earnings call that he expects AI-recommended content to make up more than 30% of the Instagram feed next year.
The app nobody's really heard of will be out of commission this September.
Experts fear the new wave of laws run up against First Amendment protections.