Mark Zuckerberg has long championed Meta Platforms Inc.’s open-source approach to artificial intelligence software — which lets other companies access and build on top of its technology — saying that having an American model as the underpinning of new products was key to ensuring US dominance over China in AI.
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 policy. As reported by Wired, a lot of text has been updated, added, or removed, but here are some of the changes that jumped out at us.
The company’s move to the right spearheaded by CEO Mark Zuckerberg ahead of the inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump is causing a user exodus from many of Meta’s platforms. But what do we know?
American tech giant, Meta, has issued an apology for Mark Zuckerberg's error on his recent Joe Rogan Experience (JRE) podcast appearance.
Meta has apologised after it was threatened with legal action by Indian lawmakers over Mark Zuckerberg’s comments about the country’s general election. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
Speaking on The Joe Rogan Experience, as quoted by Business Insider, Zuckerberg said, "Probably in 2025, we at Meta, as well as the other companies that are basically working on this, are going to have an AI that can effectively be a sort of midlevel engineer that you have at your company that can write code."
Zuckerberg Tells Rogan, In Normal Corporations, CEOs Fight To Stay Employed, ‘I’m Not Worried About Losing My Job, I Control Our Company’ Mark Zuckerberg recently joined Joe Rogan on The Joe Rogan Experience to discuss Meta's future,
Appearing on the Joe Rogan podcast, Zuckerberg had said that in elections around the world in 2024, most incumbent governments, including the one in India, had been voted out of power.
Podcaster and media personality Joe Rogan does not identify as a Republican or a Democrat, he said this week. “I don’t consider myself a Republican. I don’t consider myself a Democrat,
Mark Zuckerberg was popular and cool for the last 18 months. That has all seemed to shift since moderation changes at Meta and Trump's inauguration.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently appeared on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast to discuss the importance of what he called 'masculine energy' in corporate culture.  Experts say these comments, along with structural and cultural changes at Meta,
How podcasters like Joe Rogan and Logan Paul turned young men, a once apolitical demographic, into a massively powerful voting bloc