This time, the tech billionaire “liked” a sultry snap featuring Jeff Bezos’ wife-to-be on the Meta-owned social media platform Instagram, prompting droves of internet denizens to clown him online. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been caught ‘liking’ a sultry snap of Lauren Sanchez on social media. Picture: Getty.
Meta announced this week that it would dump fact-checkers in the US. While some experts say there could be broader implications, others caution it won't cost us a "golden age of truth" on platforms such as Facebook.
You might think sub-letting a room that fits a queen bed in a clean, comfortable, well-located apartment would be easy in a housing crisis. Not so, but I got there in the end.
Australian executives are openly discussing what they were once too scared to say out loud: has the corporate world’s push for greater diversity gone too far?
When Joe Rogan hosts an interview, the winds of culture shift. This week, he sat down with Meta CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, to discuss the history of social media censorship and the future of free speech.
According to one professor, “ordinary citizens should be very concerned” about Mark Zuckerberg’s changes to how Meta will handle fact-checking in 2025.
WASHINGTON: A global network on Thursday cautioned that there would be real-world harm if Meta expands its decision to do away with fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram, while refuting
BJP MP Nishikant Dubey criticised Zuckerberg's claim on Joe Rogan's podcast that post-Covid distrust led to incumbents, including India's government, losing in 2024 elections.
Zuckerberg on Tuesday announced that Meta would end its partnerships with third party fact-checkers and institute a “Community Notes” model.
Mark Zuckerberg Staring at Lauren Sanchez's Cleavage During Donald Trump's Inauguration, also known as Mark Zuckerberg Looking at Jeff Bezos' Fiancée, refe
WATCH Trump rally where he is expected to sign a raft of executive orders; Penny Wong and Joe Hockey reveal what Trump will be like for Australia. Follow updates here.
Billionaires, big tech execs and power brokers will be out in force at Inauguration Day next week as the world braces for Donald Trump’s second term.