"This is going to be a big year," said Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Speaking on a post-earnings call with analysts of myriad technological advances in the works, he also affirmed what's been evident,
Mark Zuckerberg may be taking a page from Elon Musk’s playbook. But the Facebook founder’s social-network empire stands little chance of suffering a similar fate to Twitter.
A video of the interaction shared on X, formerly Twitter, showed Zuckerberg quickly looking down at Sanchez and then away from her. Conservative X account Amuse posted Monday, "Lauren Sanchez, Jeff Bezos' fiancée, captivated Mark Zuckerberg during the ...
Mark Zuckerberg appeared to have one of the best views at Donald Trump’s inauguration—but not for the reasons one might expect.
In Seinfeld season four, episode 16, titled “The Shoes”, Costanza is caught looking down the top of the NBC president’s daughter, played by Denise Richards. However, he is caught by the NBC president and accosted, leading to the line: “Get a good look, Costanza?”
Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, and other tech leaders are providing Trump with a warmer welcome to the White House than eight years ago.
Until pretty recently, if you thought of Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, you’d probably come up with a flesh-and-blood automaton whose mission to connect the world turned into the upending of political systems and poisoning of our information environment — not to mention that weird metaverse side project.
Well, the truth and how to moderate it online, and specifically how Mark Zuckerberg is thinking about it is what we are here to examine. So I hope the two of you have some time on your hands. Zoë Schiffer: Let's do it.
In a report by The Guardian, Meta is shaking things up by scrapping third-party fact-checking and rolling out a hands-off content moderation approach. Instead, users will rely on "community notes" to self-police content – a method that Elon Musk introduced on X (formerly Twitter).
Mark Zuckerberg's Meta will no longer rely on independent fact-checkers. Instead, it will adopt a system similar to Elon Musk's X, where users can leave community notes to flag inaccuracies.
Mark Zuckerberg predicts that Instagram's Threads will reach one billion users, learn more about its growth and potential.