
Elon Musk Plans to Get Rid of Headlines on X/Twitter
Posting news articles on X would just display a lead image, making room for more posts on your feed, according to Musk.
Posting news articles on X would just display a lead image, making room for more posts on your feed, according to Musk.
If you've used Facebook at any point after 2007, we tell you the steps you need to take to receive a pay out.
With X's latest technical malfunction wiping millions of photos from the site, even owner Musk is questioning its future.
For some time this week, Twitter seemed to be throttling links to rival social media sites and specific news publications.
While Musk is no stranger to legal troubles, is Twitter's hampering of the DoJ's Trump investigation a new low?
The review found no evidence linking Facebook to psychological harm, but it's more complicated than that.
Agence France-Presse wants X to pay up for displaying its news content, following Canada's recent copyright crackdown.
Self-proclaimed "free speech absolutist" Elon Musk is suing a non-profit organization that published research about X.
Turns out, you can't just put a giant, glowing X on top of a building in downtown San Francisco whenever you want.
Meta, although relatively quieter on the AI front than some of its big tech rivals, might just have a big surprise in store.
Twitter Blue users need to be vigilant as convincing phishing scams are fraudulently gaining access to their accounts.
Powered by AI, the Facebook and Instagram owner has just posted its first quarterly profit since 2021
Will Musk's desperate tactics be enough to keep advertisers on the platform?
The new feature is currently limited to the app only, and being tested with a small group of users.
The requested feature is now available for all users, although there are still a few kinks to work out for the new platform.
Meta insists it acted in good faith in relation to the White House 'censorship’ investigation.
As part of a class action taken against the company, some users are entitled to apply for part of the settlement amount.
It's goodbye to the bird, as troubled Twitter takes on a new visual identity, in typical Musk style.
The feature is only available to Verified Organizations, a subscription that costs $1,000 per month for businesses.
The so-called ‘Twitter-killer’ has seen a 71% drop in users’ time spent on the app.
The tech giant’s large language model Llama 2 will be free for research and commercial use.