Meta's Facebook, Elon Musk's X, Google's YouTube and other tech companies have agreed to do more to tackle online hate speech ...
The pushback comes as the emboldened leaders of US tech companies, including Google CEO Sundar Pichai, have been courting ...
After Mark Zuckerberg's big announcement that Meta will no longer fact check, Google is also sending a message to the ...
The EU has since urged companies to convert the voluntary guidelines into an official policy under the union’s newer content ...
The European Union (EU) has updated its code of conduct on online hate speech, requiring social media platforms like Meta’s ...
Google rejects EU's fact-checking requirements for search and YouTube, defying new disinformation rules. Google has ...
New EU regulations call for Google to include fact-checking results alongside Google and Youtube searches. Google is refusing ...
Top tech companies like X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube have signed a voluntary commitment to make efforts to ...
Google has always resisted the idea of using fact-checking as part of its content moderation strategy, and it’s sticking to ...
Google has informed the European Union that it will not implement fact-checking in its search results and YouTube videos, as ...
Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, X, YouTube, Snapchat, LinkedIn, Dailymotion, Jeuxvideo.com, Rakuten Viber, and Microsoft-hosted consumer services have all signed the “Code ...
Meta, X, TikTok, and YouTube have signed a pledge with the EU to do more to stop hate speech on their platforms. However, ...