Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook will move to a Community Notes system as the company prepares for Donald Trump's presidency.
A prominent fact-checking organization used by Facebook to moderate political content reacted to news that it will revamp its fact-checking to better avoid bias with an article outlining its ...
As PolitiFact enters another contentious election year, we want to explain to you, our readers, how we’re maintaining transparency about our fact-checking. Independence and transparency are the heart ...
Meta announced it's ending third-party fact-checking on its platforms, calling the decision a return to a “fundamental commitment to free expression.” CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the rules had become too ...
Fact-checking President Donald Trump’s announcement on Thursday regarding the government declaration on climate change and energy, as the administration announced he was rolling back the Environmental ...
Back in January, Meta made a bold move — it dropped third-party fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram and replaced it with community notes. The company said this change was about deepening its ...
Outgoing President Biden weighed in on CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to end the fact-checking programs on Meta’s platforms, calling it a “really shameful” choice since “telling the truth matters.” ...
A massive reversal on fact-checking could soon change what you see on social media. Meta on Tuesday announced it is discontinuing its fact-checking program in the United States to allow for more “free ...
Last week, Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg announced a major change in how content in the Meta stable (including Facebook, Instagram and Threads) will be fact-checked. Bottom line: It won’t be.
Threads, Meta’s Twitter-like service and competitor to X, may be distancing itself from politics, but that doesn’t mean it won’t try to tackle the misinformation that spreads across social media — ...