Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg pushed Facebook and Instagram into a new era when he announced that they would follow in the footsteps of Elon Musk's X, doing away with fact-checkers and other content moderation in favor of community notes and freer speech.
The Meta CEO announced changes to content moderation just in time for a familiar incoming presidential administration.
Meta’s chief executive has stepped away from his mea culpa approach to issues on his platforms and has told people that he wants to return to his original thinking on free speech.
Meta is to scrap independent fact-checking in favour of a system similar to that on Elon Musk’s social media platform X.
Facebook’s algorithm angered founder Mark Zuckerberg when he shared a November 2023 post about his knee surgery and it received little engagement, The Wall Street Journal reports. It was this experience that led to the Meta CEO’s Jan.
The post Mark Zuckerberg Was Right To Fire Facebook's Rogue Fact-Checkers appeared first on Reason.com.
Content moderation has always been a pit of despair for Meta. And now, Mark Zuckerberg's "apology tour" seems to be officially over.
Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta will now let users call gay people “mentally ill,” describe women as property and refer to transgender people as “it.” In an apparent attempt to curry favor with President-elect Donald Trump,
The International Fact-Checking Network proposed crowdsourcing in conjunction with professionals, a "new model."
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Senator Ted Cruz asked the CEO of Meta/Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, pointedly: “Are you a neutral platform?” Zuckerberg claimed with a straight face: “We consider ourselves to be a platform for all ideas.