Twitter is the worst of the bunch, followed by TikTok. YouTube and Pinterest are a bit better.
Read your messages without anyone knowing you've read your messages.
Hundreds of internal documents formed the basis of dozen of news stories. They have not been made public. Until now.
Gizmodo has reviewed, redacted, and published more than two dozen leaked Facebook documents, the first of hundreds to come.
Whatsapp will now allow large group chats for specific topics or communities like an apartment building or a school.
The company says it’s adding a thumbs down to its comment section to let its users "feel more in control."
The suit claims Meta and Snap “knowingly and purposely” created defective services that harm teen mental health.
U.S. advertisers have a growing appetite for the short-form video app and will likely spend more than $6 billion there, a new analysis predicted.
The company confirmed the long-awaited feature before backtracking and clarifying this update only applies to YouTube TV.
Ukrainian Facebook users are facing myriad online threats right now, from networks of a fake journalists to false reports of abuse to outright hacks.
The online platform is removing ads or content that claim climate change doesn’t exist.
The crackdown is the country's latest attempt to quash dissent using its sweeping—and controversial—social media laws.
Meta’s News Feed boosted the visibility of misinformation, nudity, violence, and Russian state media by 30 percent for six months.
The app added seven new features to enhance the platform’s messaging functionality and usability.
A 36-year-old Brit was arrested and convicted for tweeting “the only good Brit soldier is a deed one,” after a 100-year-old British captain died.
The company reportedly hired Republican-aligned firm Targeted Victory to plant negative articles and attempt to influence public opinion against TikTok.
The Russian government banned Instagram and said Facebook's parent company was an "extremist organization," and a court upheld that designation.
Russia banned Instagram after Meta allowed users' calls for violence against Russian soldiers and Vladimir Putin, so engineers made their own version: Rossgram.
No internet connection, no problem... with some caveats.
2.3 million refugees have fled Ukraine since the Russian invasion started.