Meta on Thursday filed a lawsuit against the Federal Trade Commission arguing its in-house trials are unconstitutional.
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Mark Zuckerberg’s newest nemesis, Max Schrems, says Meta’s new pay-for-privacy subscription doesn’t comply with EU laws.
As the holiday season approaches, consumers and tech companies alike have shopping on the brain.
Meta has disbanded a team in charge of making sure the company developed AI in an ethical way, according to The Information.
Sam Altman thinks big and spends big. But when it comes to a product that makes money, the whole AI thing can feel a little Metaverse-y…
Meta, Google, and TikTok successfully argued that individual European countries can’t cook up their own laws for large digital platforms.
ByteDance is undergoing a sweeping restructuring and scaleback of its VR division, according to a Financial Times report on Tuesday.
WPP issued a reduction of its profit outlook for the second time in consecutive quarters on Thursday, citing major headwinds.
A sprawling lawsuit alleging Meta intentionally designed Instagram and Facebook with features it knew were harmful to younger users.
Meta sunk a lot of cash into its metaverse bet. Now, it wants it to work.
Meta’s patents highlight a recent consumer tech trend: Tech firms are testing the boundaries of just how close they can get to users.
Meta might want to make synthetic data from your Facebook posts. While this helps solve the privacy issue, the issue of bias is still present.
Meta is rolling out subscription versions of Instagram and Facebook in Europe that won’t feature targeted ads.
The patent shows that, despite the company’s public interest in large language models, it’s still hard at work on artificial reality.
You’d be forgiven for thinking social media addiction is scientific fact, but there’s no hard evidence it exists. So why is it a thing?