Representatives of major tech companies -- including Meta, Google, Facebook and X -- skipped a public hearing focused on disinformation on social media hosted Wednesday by the government of Brazil.
Natalia Viana, of Brazil's leading investigative platform Agência Pública, writes that Zuckerberg's attack on fact-checkers ...
Former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is facing criminal charges, has been invited to Trump's inauguration even though ...
Morning routines may look a bit different next school year, for Williamsville families. Parents learned more about a proposal ...
The removal of Meta’s fact-checking feature will only apply to the US until its new community notes program is thoroughly ...
Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to do away with Meta’s third-party fact-checking service was presented as a sweeping cultural ...
Fake news only available in countries run by oligarchs   Meta has told the Brazilian government that it doesn't yet have to ...
A bill aimed at restricting “biological men” from participating in women’s sports passed the House of Representatives Tuesday ...
Meta told Brazil it would not yet end fact-checks outside the US, but its attempts to clarify its new social media policies fell flat Tuesday as the Latin American nation slammed measures which ...
As of 2023, about two-thirds of Brazilian schools imposed some restriction on cellphone use, while 28% banned them entirely, ...
Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg stunned many with his announcement that he was pulling the plug on fact-checking at ...