Knock It Off, Lazy News Outlets. 'Momo' Isn't Telling Kids To Hurt Themselves.
When absurd ghost stories are passed off as actual journalism
When absurd ghost stories are passed off as actual journalism
After a harm reduction advocate slammed a hardy but misleading factoid, users who retweeted his message complained that they had been shadowbanned.
But what she did wasn't actually illegal.
If its recent record is any indication, Winston Churchill might have been wrong about democracy.
The media are supposed to fight censorship. But to protect their financial interests, some European publishers want to mandate it.
Plus: Rapper 21 Savage released from ICE custody and more details on how Homeland Security scammed immigrant students
Plus: Nancy Pelosi on the "Green New Deal"; John Boehner, cannabis lobbyist
How big hotel chains became arms of the surveillance state.
Plus: Author Zadie Smith talking cultural appropriation, and Budweiser versus Big Corn
Big publishers want new sources of revenue. But trying to force license fees for linking will backfire.
Gun buyers, gay lovers, cannabis customers, and Yelp users are just a few of the groups that benefit from this federal law.
Plus: FDA greenlights new 23andMe test, Kamala Harris gets the Onion treatment, and nobody likes Trump's new shutdown salve.
Covingtongate, Buzzfeed's bomb, Baby Hitler, Kamalamentum…maybe it's time to pull the plug.
Plus: Kamala Harris officially enters the 2020 race and Google News may leave the E.U.
"We shouldn't have to think about self-censoring what we say online."
It's "important to be clear about how rare this behavior is on social platforms," researchers say.
Author and sex worker Maggie McNeill was suspended from Twitter Tuesday for a hyperbolic comment about burning the White House down.
On Monday, a federal appeals court considered Grindr's guilt in a case involving app-based impersonators.
Social media platforms have every right to do whatever the hell they want, but they shouldn't really do much speech policing at all.
A Barberton judge just sentenced a woman to jail, house arrest, and a year without social media for repeating a rumor about a pellet gun at school.
New film The Creepy Line argues that tech giants sometimes silence conservatives and try to steer America left.
One year after Net Neutrality, connection speed is up, the discrimination critics feared is non-existent, and the debate about Internet regulation is abysmal.
Also: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez owns the cons while spouting policy B.S.
Plus: Trump changes his mind about military spending and why Rand Paul hates Trump's new attorney general pick.
New rules ban erotic art, talk of shared sexual interests, kink groups, and anything that "encourages sexual encounters between adults."
Research shows a fifth of its users seek out sexual images. But the sharing site is now part of a massive media conglomerate.
Plus: the First Amendment problems with prosecuting Wikileaks and the trans troops ban is dealt another blow.
"I had to add a content warning or else."
As Facebook's supposed ideological allies unfriend the social media giant, the tech industry is learning that there are no permanent allegiances in politics.
The snitch crusade is ostensibly about making sure hot women aren't making money off their hotness without giving the government a cut.
Censoring politicians' racist, sexist, and abhorrent behavior on social media does a big favor to racist, sexist, and abhorrent politicians.
What should the culture of free speech, free expression, and ownership look like on our social media platforms?
Plus: Trump endorses sentencing reform and Bitcoin's value continues to fall.
Social media execs did themselves no favors by becoming so closely identified with the Democratic Party.
Are we all just living through Elon Musk's dystopian simulation?
Facebook, Twitter, and other mainstream social networks have their issues. Are these 5 platforms viable alternatives?
Plus: Brazil's worrisome new president, the long-tail of the housing crisis, and Brett Kavanaugh's replacement
How it happened and what (if anything) we can learn from such cases.
It's time to move beyond the social media giants to a more decentralized world that's harder to control
Under Chinese law, disrespecting the national anthem is punishable by up to 15 days in jail.
Hundreds of pages and accounts have been purged over accusations that they were "inauthentic." The page operators disagree.
The bigger the company, the bigger the target.
Will it stop toxic behavior or just encourage more demands for censorship?
Inviting followers to harass this man violates the platform's terms of service.
The perils of poorly sourced stories
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