Andre Rohe, who previously held senior engineering roles at Meta, YouTube and Google, has been hired to lead a newly created consolidated product engineering team in the Disney Entertainment and ESPN technology group.
The U.K.'s National Crime Agency has said it's made big progress in stamping out accounts linked to people-smuggling on Meta, X, TikTok and YouTube.
Meta stands to be one of the largest beneficiaries of a TikTok ban in the US, analysts say. Through ad dollars alone, Meta could rake in up to $3.38B.
Meta is offering deals to creators to promote Instagram on other short-form video apps, including TikTok, Snapchat and YouTube, CNBC has learned.
Meta could be the biggest winner given its large user base said analysts at Morgan Stanley. Alphabet's YouTube, along with Snapchat, Pinterest, and Roblox are some of the top contenders to benefit ...
Tech giant Meta is finally answering thousands of Instagram users' prayers for a pause button on Reels. The company shared how it's testing the latest pause feature on Reels that gives users the chance to start and stop a video with a single tap.
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.
Chinese state-linked social media accounts amplified narratives celebrating the launch of Chinese startup DeepSeek's AI models last week, days before the news tanked U.S. tech stocks, according to online analysis firm Graphika.
Artificial intelligence stocks were moving higher today as earnings season kicked into full swing and as investors continue to digest the impact of DeepSeek on the AI sector. The
Disney Entertainment and ESPN have hired Andre Rohe as their new executive vice president of product engineering. The former Meta, YouTube and Google engineering executive, who will report directly to chief product and technology officer Adam Smith,
Meta Platforms and its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, have agreed to pay $25 million to settle a lawsuit filed by former President Donald Trump over his suspension from Facebook following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.