The Supreme Court on Friday upheld Congress’s ban on TikTok, marking the end of the popular video-sharing platform’s presence in the United States.
Mark Zuckerberg-led Meta made another move to the right Friday with the announcement that the company is ending its diversity, equity, and inclusion program. In a memo to the company's 72,000 employees,
Donald Trump is set to become the 47th president of the United States, beginning his second term and taking over from Joe Biden. The swearing-in ceremony will take place at the Capitol in Washington,
Less than two months before Mark Zuckerberg announced Meta would be axing its diversity, equity and inclusion program, he assured Trump adviser Stephen Miller that he would not get in the way of the president-elect’s agenda.
Meta is ending significant diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives due to changes in the “legal and policy landscape,” according
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Biden administration officials would “scream” and “curse” at his employees when they disagreed with the government’s takedown requests over pandemic-related content.
Donald Trump loses out on Supreme Court and ... program in the United States, which will be replaced by a community notes system inspired by the model used by Elon Musk's X. Zuckerberg described ...
Justices and advisors of the Supreme Federal Court (STF) are cautiously observing Meta's shift towards a model resembling X (formerly Twitter). At the same time, members of the court are downplaying CEO Mark Zuckerberg's remark that Latin American courts issue decisions in secrecy.
Constitutional common sense has prevailed. Early on Friday, a unanimous Supreme Court upheld the Protecting Americans From Foreign-Adversary-Controlled Applications Act, which will effectively ban TikTok in the United States unless it divests itself of Chinese control.
After outgoing US President Joe Biden recently warned Americans of the threat oligarchy poses for the country, a Fortune report found that the world’s richest consolidated wealth and became $1.5 trillion richer in his term.
While Trump’s popularity with his political peers may be dwindling, the support from important tech-business leaders remains strong