Fact-checking firms that teamed with Meta are refuting CEO Mark Zuckerberg's suggestion linking their work to censorship.
The social network has given up on fact-checking. That’s a good thing.
An investigation into the crash in Delray Beach involving a fire truck and a Brightline train is underway, and a union is not happy the names of the firefighters have been released.
In the past year, Paul Tweedly, owner of Captain Paul’s Firehouse Dogs in Lawrence, has had open-heart surgery and three stomach surgeries. His doctor told him if he kept working, he’d be in the ...
Even before the election, the world’s richest man, billionaire Elon Musk, was inseparable from Trump. There’s also Musk’s one-time PayPal colleague, Peter Thiel, who has been a longtime benefactor to ...
The tech giant implemented major updates to its hateful-conduct policies on Jan. 7, 2025 — the same day it ended its U.S.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is dealing with a flood of fake news headlines after announcing that his social media sites ...
The Meta founder recently embraced a new look—and abandoned Facebook users. 2025 trend watch: Hate speech is so in!
The announcement by Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg that the is eliminating so-called "fact checkers" is a sign that self-proclaimed experts are losing ground. Good.
Meta announced it would move its content reviewers and policy writers from California to Texas and other areas.
Lincoln Northwest High School canceled all the basketball games schedule for Wednesday night after a semi with chemicals inside caught on fire in the parking lot.
Meta’s shift away from fact checking will require changes for the billions of people who use Facebook, Instagram and Threads. Here’s how they can tell truth from fiction.