One might assume that Mark Zuckerberg’s houses consist primarily of sleek Silicon Valley mansions. That’s not wrong—the Facebook (now known as Meta) founder does own a compound not far from his office—but as his fortune has grown over the years,
Mark Zuckerberg is moving Meta's platform security and content oversight teams out of California and shifting staff who review posts to Texas in a bid to combat concerns about liberal bias and over-censorship at his social-media empire. The CEO of Facebook ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg slighted his company's home state of California in a video announcing new content policies for Facebook, Instagram and Threads.
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,
Meta is reportedly set to cut around five percent of its workforce. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the company will lay off the lowest performers.
I think a lot of the corporate world is pretty culturally neutered,” the Meta CEO told Joe Rogan, a day after axing Meta's DEI programs. “... I think having a culture that celebrates aggression a bit more has its own merits that are really positive.
Senator Markwayne Mullin told right-wing commentator Benny Johnson on an episode of The Benny Show Thursday that Zuckerberg had begun speaking regularly with the president-elect. “Mark met with President Trump the day before he announced that they were going to change the way they do censorship, essentially,” Mullin said.
Two weeks ahead of the inauguration, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg named President-elect Donald Trump ... who teaches strategic political communications at the University of Southern California and the University of California, Berkeley.
Meta is shifting its content moderation to Texas, ditching fact-checking, easing restrictions, and bringing back political content.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg used YouTube and its battle to take down pirated content to defend his own company’s use of copyrighted data to train AI.
It's true that powerful forces control what you can see on Facebook and Instagram. But it's not the media calling those shots.
Mark Lemley said he could not “in good conscience” represent Mark Zuckerberg given recent decisions to "encourage disinformation and hate speech" on his company's platforms. A suit pending in Northern California alleges Meta infringed the copyrights of several authors by using their works to train its generative AI program.