Meta announced Tuesday it's doing away with third-party fact-checking in favor of community notes. Several lawmakers told BI the move is an indication Mark Zuckerberg is catering to Trump.
Meta on Tuesday announced it will eliminate its third-party fact-checking program to "restore free expression" and move to a "Community Notes" model, similar to the system that exists on Elon Musk's platform X.
Omeed Malik, 1789 Capital founder, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss Meta lifting restrictions on speech and social media fact-checking.
The first indication of Mark Zuckerberg's capitulation to the MAGA movement came when he went to Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort for Thanksgiving in December.
Sam Lessin, general partner at Slow Ventures, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss Meta's decision to scrap its third-party fact-checking program and implement a "Community Notes" model, whether CEO Zuckerberg is liberal, and more.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Tuesday morning that, in the United States, the company is ending its third party fact-checking program and switching to a Community Notes program instead. The move came just hours after Meta (META) announced it was adding 3 new members to its board: Dana White, John Elkann and Charlie Songhurst.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Tuesday morning that, in the United States, the company is ending its third party fact-checking program and switching to a Community Notes program instead. The move came just hours after Meta (META) announced it was adding 3 new members to its board: Dana White, John Elkann and Charlie Songhurst.
As a part of a significant overhaul of its content moderation policies announced on Tuesday, Meta admitted that its approach to limiting political content across its platforms had been “pretty blunt” and would now be addressed. The company said it would once again phase in political content into Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, allowing people who want political content in their feeds to see more of it.
Meta is moving its safety and content moderation teams from California to Texas and other states. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the shifts would help address concerns of bias and overcensorship.
Dan Flax, Neuberger Berman senior research analyst, joins CNBC's 'Squawk Box' to discuss reactions to Meta new content moderation policy.
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