Representatives of major tech companies -- including Meta, Google, Facebook and X -- skipped a public hearing focused on disinformation on social media hosted Wednesday by the government of Brazil.
In the quiet Swiss town of Davos, Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain unfolds as young Hans Castorp’s brief visit to a ...
Donald Trump has been in office for less than 24 hours, but his administration is already working overtime to strip personnel ...
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed a bill on Monday restricting smartphone use in schools, aligning with a ...
Big AI companies have come out hard against comprehensive regulatory efforts in the West — but are receiving a warm welcome ...
Jair Bolsonaro and a Times reporter discussed the former Brazilian president’s two mysterious nights at the Hungarian Embassy ...
Jair Bolsonaro has had a rough couple of years: election losses, criminal cases, questionable embassy sleepovers. So when he ...
Former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is facing criminal charges, has been invited to Trump's inauguration even though ...
The removal of Meta’s fact-checking feature will only apply to the US until its new community notes program is thoroughly ...
Mark Zuckerberg’s decision to do away with Meta’s third-party fact-checking service was presented as a sweeping cultural ...
Fake news only available in countries run by oligarchs   Meta has told the Brazilian government that it doesn't yet have to ...
Meta told Brazil it would not yet end fact-checks outside the US, but its attempts to clarify its new social media policies fell flat Tuesday as the Latin American nation slammed measures which ...