Meta’s artificial intelligence bots across Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp were still telling inquisitive users that the US president is Joe Biden – despite Donald Trump’s
"Social media has given up on fact-checking,” the president said at his farewell address. “The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit."
Big tech goes topsy-turvy. Zuckerberg steers Meta to open dialgue — in Texas. UFC’s Dana White joins board. Angels sing.
Former US President Joe Biden’s presidency was briefly omitted from Google’s list of US presidents. The issue, attributed to a ‘data error’, raised questions about tech giants’ reliability and neutrality in handling politically sensitive content.
A video shared on Facebook claims President Joe Biden’s farewell address was pre-recorded. Verdict: False Lead Stories debunked the claim on Jan. 16. The outlet reported that New York Times photographer Doug Mills shared a photo from the Oval Office that was consistent with the timing of the speech.
President Biden’s farewell address was a cliché-laden mess, yet the media coverage described it as a “speech for the history books” and a “defense of democracy” that
No. His “aww shucks,” doddering nature is effective, but Joe Biden’s legacy is not the Restorer of Norms. He is leaving office quietly having caused more damage to the rule of law than arguably any single one of his predecessors.
Hours after returning to the White House, President Donald Trump made a symbolic mark on the future of artificial intelligence by repealing former President Joe Biden’s guardrails for the fast-develop
In his final hours as president, Joe Biden issued preemptive pardons for House committee members who investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol and the police officers who testified before that committee.
Big Tech has gone topsy-turvy in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump's November victory. Four years ago, Facebook and Instagram banned
Biden didn't say "end of quote" by accident. He read a quote by former President Dwight D. Eisenhower before switching back to his own words.