How to talk to your friends and family about misinformation and conspiracy theories
Misinformation is everywhere online — and it’s hard to decipher. But confronting your friends and family after you’ve seen them
Read moreMisinformation is everywhere online — and it’s hard to decipher. But confronting your friends and family after you’ve seen them
Read moreIn the latest sign of US platforms bracing for the 2020 US presidential election in November, Twitter has said it
Read moreWhatsApp, one of the most popular instant messaging platforms on the planet, has rolled out a new feature in select
Read moreDonald Trump’s feud with Twitter just become a legal matter, as the president signed an executive order that looks to regulate social
Read morePresident Trump is again testing Twitter’s stomach for misinformation flowing from its most prominent users. In a flurry of recent
Read moreCoronavirus misinformation on Twitter will now have a warning label attached, the social media company announced Monday. Tweets that contain
Read moreFacebook removed hundreds of accounts and pages involved in manipulating public debate, many based out of Russia and Iran, in
Read moreMisinformation around the COVID-19 pandemic is all over the place, including social media. But it’s not a complete wasteland. While
Read moreSocial media platforms have been flooded with falsehoods, conspiracy theories, and exaggerations about the coronavirus since the outbreak emerged last
Read moreFacebook is hoping to have fewer “whoops” moments by working to identify threats as they happen — starting with elections.
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