Hate speech is a huge problem, and companies like X, Facebook, and Instagram have pledged to the EU to do more to tackle it.
Meta overhauled its approach to US moderation on Tuesday, ditching fact-checking, announcing a plan to move its trust and safety teams, and perhaps most impactfully, updating its Hateful Conduct ...
Meta's Facebook, Elon Musk's X, Google's YouTube and other tech companies have agreed to do more to tackle online hate speech ...
Two of America’s Big Tech companies are opening the door to more “free expression,” even if it means more hateful content.
Former Staunton city council candidate Wilson Fauber was recently found to have violated the hate-speech code of the National ...
Meta announced it is recalibrating its automated content moderation to limit only so-called high-severity violations ...
The Sussexes have spent years advocating for greater protections around social-media harm and bullying, especially for ...
Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook will move to a Community Notes system as the company prepares for Donald Trump's ...
The European Union (EU) has updated its code of conduct on online hate speech, requiring social media platforms like Meta’s ...
Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X, YouTube, Snapchat, LinkedIn, Dailymotion, Jeuxvideo.com, Rakuten Viber, and Microsoft-hosted consumer services have all signed the “Code ...
Meta's Facebook, Elon Musk's X, Google's YouTube and other tech companies have agreed to do more to tackle online hate speech under an updated code of conduct that will now be integrated into EU tech ...