Bosses from five of the largest social media firms were grilled about how they are protecting children.
X's Linda Yaccarino, TikTok's Shou Zi Chew and other social media CEOs testified before a Congress committee examining ways to curb harms from online ...
"You have a product that's killing people," one lawmaker told Mark Zuckerberg as the Meta CEO testified in a hearing on protecting kids online.
The heads of some of the world's biggest social media companies were under fire in the hours-long hearing.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg apologized Wednesday to parents in the audience of a Senate online child safety hearing who say Instagram contributed to their ...
"I'm sorry for everything you've all gone through," the Meta CEO said.
Top social media CEOs testified before Congress in a hearing intended to drum up support for federal legislation to safeguard children from the online ...
Mark Zuckerberg was heckled by parents at a Senate hearing on the role of tech companies in preventing online child sexual exploitation.
US politicians grill tech execs for platforms causing harm online. By David Braue on Feb 01 2024 12:33 PM. Print article ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg apologized to families of kids who were victims of online abuse and harm at a Senate hearing.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is testifying at a hearing about child sex exploitation online. Meta's Facebook and Instagram sites are the target of related ...
Mark Zuckerberg has accumulated a long history of public apologies, often issued in the wake of crisis or when Facebook users rose up against unannounced ...
Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff today pressed Mark Zuckerberg on the safety of children online. In a U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing, ...
CEOs of Meta, X, TikTok, Snap and Discord questioned before Congress over alleged harms to young users on their platforms.
Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook and the leader of Meta, stood up during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday on online child safety. He then ...
Parents of affected children said the Meta CEO's apology was 'a bit too late'. An installation protesting against Meta CEO ...
Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg had a rough time testifying in Congress on Wednesday about social media's mental health effects, but he must have cracked ...
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Zuckerberg was back in damage control mode on Wednesday when he apologized to the parents of children exploited, bullied or driven to self harm via social.
On Wednesday, U.S. senators hammered major tech CEOs for not doing more to prevent child abuse online. Today on “Post Reports,” we dive into the takeaways ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has no plans for his company to ramp up hiring, but says he's spending heavily on computing infrastructure and the metaverse.
The Meta CEO has been overshadowed in recent years by more antic-prone tech executives. But he's still very much a power broker.
Mark Zuckerberg lost $16 billion on the Metaverse last year, but Meta investors are elated because job cuts and office closures led to huge profits.