The fusillade of major announcements from Meta this month — including the termination of its fact-checking and DEI programs and the ascension of its enigmatic content-moderation czar, Joel Kaplan, to head global policy — prompted a familiar churn of political reaction across the left and right.
He has gone through a transformation and has become a cool looking dude with the gold necklace and [affinity for] the UFC. It’s the new Zuckerberg,” Ben Mezrich, whose book “The
Meta’s return to political content, looser moderation rules, and Trump-friendly policies look a lot like Musk’s vision for X.
Two weeks ahead of the inauguration, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg named President-elect Donald Trump ... Just days earlier, Meta elevated prominent Republican Joel Kaplan to lead its global affairs operation, after having served as a longtime executive at ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is set to adopt a new direction for the social media giant, drawing inspiration from Elon Musk’s approach at X, formerly known as Twitter. In a sweeping series of changes, Zuckerberg aims to emulate X’s Community Notes feature,
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg blamed former COO Sheryl Sandberg for an inclusivity initiative at the company ahead of his rollback of DEI programs, the New York Times reported.
Two weeks ahead of the inauguration, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg named President ... Just days earlier, Meta elevated prominent Republican Joel Kaplan to lead its global affairs operation, after ...
That is why the most consequential announcement involves Joel Kaplan, Zuckerberg's tight ... America," defending Meta publicly — and Mark Zuckerberg personally — from the right, the left ...
Mark Zuckerberg, and the company’s new chief global affairs officer, Joel Kaplan, have been making the rounds in right-wing media. During these right-wing media appearances, which come ahead of ...
Tech and media experts told Fox News Digital that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg should be applauded for adopting a fact-checking system similar to Elon Musk's X.
I think we're doing the right thing,” he told me, “It’s just that we should've done it sooner.” Seven years later, Zuckerberg no longer thinks more moderation is the right thing. In a five-minute Reel,
Readers discuss Mark Zuckerberg’s decisions to end fact-checking on social media, DEI program in Meta. Regarding the Jan. 8 front-page article “ Meta ends fact checks as it readies for Trump era ”: