"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."
Joe Biden, who will be replaced by Donald Trump in five days, defended his legacy and the importance of American democracy in an Oval Office address
President Joe Biden slammed Meta’s decision to end its fact-checking program, calling the announcement from Mark Zuckerberg “really shameful.”
US President Joe Biden blasted Meta Friday for scrapping fact-checking on Facebook and Instagram in the United States, calling the move "really shameful" after a global network warned of real-world harm if the tech giant expands its decision to other countries.
President Joe Biden on Friday said he was still considering whether to give pardons to people who have been criticized or threatened by President-elect Donald Trump. Speaking to reporters at the White House,
Zuckerberg says Biden administration 'screamed' and 'cursed' at Meta employees. He also discussed how Meta plans to move forward with content restrictions
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.
Biden's farewell speech warning that oligarchs pose a threat to democracy has echoed a growing problem in the world, economic and historical experts say.
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.
On an episode of "The Joe Rogan Experience" released Friday, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg painted a picture of Biden administration officials berating Facebook staff over requests to remove certain content from the social media platform.
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