Meta announced this week it was ending third-party fact-checking and moving towards community notes. Some experts fear it could lead to a rise in health misinformation.
Fact-checking is essential, but leaving it to social media platforms risks undermining democracy and suppressing diverse voices.
From person-to-person coaching and intensive hands-on seminars to interactive online courses and media reporting, Poynter helps journalists sharpen skills and elevate storytelling throughout their ...
After gauging player feedback, Treyarch reversed its decision on the controversial Zombies Directed Mode change in the latest Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 update. The new update for Call of Duty: Black ...
Commenting on the surge, Gizmodo suggested that “apparently not everyone is ready to live in a post-truth world... Fittingly, ...
The fact-check change came alongside a set of sweeping policy and staffing refreshes at Meta, including the appointment of ...
Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) said Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg met with President-elect Trump a day ahead of announcing the ...
In a move users are calling "embarrassing" and lacking "courage," Instagram and Threads head Adam Mosseri announced that the ...
Not satisfied with what he’s done to America, the world’s richest man is now looking to interfere in a European country.
Donald Trump just got more terrible news in his hush-money case, as he desperately waits for the Supreme Court to save him.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg pushed Facebook and Instagram into a new era when he announced that they would follow in the ...
Meta recently announced it will cease working with third-party fact-checking organizations to flag misleading posts on ...