The announcement by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg that Facebook and Instagram would end ... who cheered it as a "vindication" for Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito, who dissented from the rest of the court in late 2023 in a case involving content regulation ...
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.
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.
Few surprises emerged in the Supreme Court arguments over the Protecting Americans Act, which demands that ByteDance, the Chinese Communist Party-affiliated owner of TikTok, either divest from the ...
“The golden age of America begins right now,” Trump proclaimed. For his billionaire backers, it has already begun.
If you want a little insight into the status of women in the new Donald Trump regime, take a look at his inauguration. The ones with the good spots were there not because of their own accomplishment or influence,
TikTok CEO Shou Chew appealed to Donald Trump’s ego in a video statement on the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold ... including Elon Musk, Jess Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg. Silicon Valley has cozied up to the incoming administration.
President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance both used Bibles with sentimental value to take the oath of office.
Will Oremus, tech news analysis writer for The Washington Post, says conservative lawmakers have always viewed moderating or fact-checking online content as censorship — even though the Supreme Court ruled last year that either is a form of protected speech.
In Trump’s first term, Meta quietly introduced a slew of Republican-friendly changes. But led by Joel Kaplan, the company is done playing both sides and is going all-in on MAGA.
When the Supreme Court upheld a law that banned TikTok from the US, it seemed well aware that its ruling could resonate far beyond one app. The justices delivered an unsigned opinion with a quote from Justice Felix Frankfurter from 1944: “in considering the application of established legal rules to the ‘totally new problems’ raised by the airplane and radio,