Social media giant Meta's decision to move away from fact-checking and content moderation on its platforms like Facebook and ...
"Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts," the late New York Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan memorably ...
Meta has relaxed its rules on hate speech, allowing harmful stereotypes and permitting derogatory remarks about sexual orientation and gender. Critics warn this policy change could lead to real-world ...
A recent meta-analysis published in JAMA Psychiatry addresses a common misperception that trauma-focused therapies are ...
Meta's decision to stop fact-checking doesn't apply to the EU, which has sweeping rules that require social media firms to do more, not less, to prevent harm. One Nobel Peace Prize winner warned that ...
The body's co-chair says moving to community notes could have a big impact on gender rights and minority groups.
First: Sexually explicit Facebook ads raise eyebrows in Europe Meta may be entering its “free speech” era in the United States, but a report that turned up thousands of sexually explicit ads on ...
As Mark Zuckerberg pulls back on Meta's content moderation in the name of free speech, some creators have concerns.