Introduction Social media’s rapid rise over the last decade has incited grave concerns among policymakers and the public ...
When Team Biden alerted Twitter and Facebook to disinformation, the right condemned it was an outrageous abuse. Now, Team ...
Social-media companies never wanted to aggressively police content on their platforms. Now, they are deciding they don’t have to anymore. Mark Zuckerberg’s announcement that Meta Platforms will end ...
The FTC’s use of antitrust law—real or threatened—to change platforms’ content-moderation decisions confronts important First Amendment principles about editorial discretion, compelled speech, ...
Social media platforms commonly use artificial intelligence for content moderation, with the AI software itself relying on algorithms to screen content posted by social media users. Ultimately, the AI ...
New York Attorney General Letitia James announced Thursday that social media companies must start reporting their content moderation policies to her office, as required by the “Stop Hiding Hate” Act.
California will no longer enforce key provisions of a law requiring social media companies to disclose details about their content moderation practices after settling a lawsuit with Elon Musk’s X Corp ...
Social-media companies are now pulling back on all of their content moderation on their platforms, Alexa Course, Meghan Bobrowsky, and Jeff Horwitz of The Wall Street Journal report. Back in 2022, ...
New York is mandating that major social media apps disclose the volume of their hate speech and misinformation.
SACRAMENTO, California — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday vetoed a bill that threatened massive fines when social media companies ...
CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the move is an attempt to restore free expression on Meta’s platforms. Photo: Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images Social-media companies never wanted to ...