Facebook Says Noting the CDC's Scientific Misrepresentations 'Could Mislead People'
The social media site slapped a warning on a column in which I criticized the CDC for exaggerating the evidence supporting mask mandates.
The social media site slapped a warning on a column in which I criticized the CDC for exaggerating the evidence supporting mask mandates.
When COVID-19 and the U.S. government stopped kids from seeing each other, social media was their lifeline.
Artist Dave Cicirelli challenges his audience to create meaning.
The paper is unfazed by First Amendment objections to the Biden administration's crusade against "misinformation" on social media.
Plus: Some State of the Union fact checking, a livestream discussion about gun rights and violence, and more...
The FTC is trying to seize new powers to regulate the economy.
The age verification proposal is a disaster for both children and adults.
Plus: Trump teases new avenues of authoritarianism, interest rates raised again, and more...
In the Twitter Files, every conversation with a government official contains the same warning: You can do it happily, or we’ll make you.
Alarmists are unfazed by the lack of evidence that "foreign influence campaigns" have affected public opinion or voting behavior.
Plus: Massie vs. McCarthy?, Hawley bill would ban TikTok in the U.S., and more...
Market forces have historically disrupted the tech sector and will continue to do so.
The Supreme Court takes up “true threats” and the First Amendment in Counterman v. Colorado.
Plus: FOSTA in court, challenges to Illinois' assault weapon ban, and more...
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. ET for a discussion of the Facebook Files with Robby Soave.
Secret internal Facebook emails reveal the feds' campaign to pressure social media companies into banning COVID "misinformation."
At the World Economic Forum, Brian Stelter and panelists discuss why everything is Facebook's fault.
It's hard to believe its arguments will hold up in court.
The tendency of those in power to topple or embarrass themselves by overreaching should provide a lesson to policy makers.
When I was young, I assumed government would lift people out of poverty. But those policies often do more harm than good.
Plus: ACLU sides against religious freedom, abortions after Dobbs, and more...
Critics have said for years that Facebook is a monopoly that can only be killed by federal regulation. Meanwhile, the platform bleeds users, its stock price is plummeting, and it just announced its first-ever round of layoffs.
Journalists who sound the alarm about Russian propaganda are unfazed by the lack of evidence that it has a meaningful impact.
Priscilla Villarreal found herself in a jail cell for publishing two routine stories. A federal court still can't decide what to do about that.
U.K. regulators shut down Meta/GIPHY deal in favor of their own “approved buyer.”
Two new studies say there's no evidence of political learning on social media, but it does increasingly teach us to hate our opponents.
A First Amendment case prompts The Onion to explain how parody works.
The 6th Circuit ruled that qualified immunity prevented Anthony Novak from vindicating his First Amendment rights.
Democrats and Republicans both demand solutions that are inconsistent with the First Amendment.
A new Cato report sheds light on "jawboning," or attempts by state actors "to sway the decisions of private platforms and limit the publication of disfavored speech."
Behind the scenes, federal officials pressure social media platforms to suppress disfavored speech.
Social media companies are eager to appease the government by suppressing disfavored speech.
Plus: Chinese censorship targets feminists, a new view of income inequality, and more...
It'll just lend a hand to the outlets the senator prefers.
A mother-daughter arrest in Nebraska was fueled in part by unencrypted Facebook messages police accessed through a warrant.
"The fact-checking industry has become a partisan arbiter of political disputes," notes Phil Magness.
Deplatforming controversial content is perfectly legal—and often counterproductive.
Plus: A rebranded "Build Back Better," the two-party system creates "a disconnect between elites and non-elites," and more...
The bill makes little note of parents' ability to control their own children's social media access.
Plus: Facebook censors information on abortion pills, TikTok provokes the ire of the FCC, and more...
A new ruling says Twitter and Facebook are not “common carriers" and thus cannot be forced to carry politicians' messages.
Forcing private companies to host speech violates the First Amendment.
Reporting that makes Black Lives Matter look bad should not be covered up by social media companies.
An Arkansas police officer used trumped-up charges to punish a man who criticized him for violating the Constitution.