Twitter's move to stop running political ads throws down a gauntlet to Facebook and its controversial policies.
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Author: Axios
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"Facebook released a raft of small changes to its political ad rules, but not its "anything goes" content policy" . (January 9, 2020 )"Hyde apparently kept a U.S. ambassador under surveillance in Kyiv, per new House documents" . (January 18, 2020 )"False information about the virus is spreading quickly" . (January 28, 2020 )"The 2020 Democrats don't share the Obama administration's embrace of Big Tech" . (January 23, 2020 )"The suppression of vital information early on contributed to the devastating epidemic" . (February 5, 2020 )"They had U.S.-China tensions at the top of their minds" . (January 27, 2020 )"The Democratic candidate said the platform is "propagating falsehoods" . (January 17, 2020 )"Scrutiny over social media activity has increased as more people in China turn to the internet for news" . (January 30, 2021 )"He has to do that while growing Facebook and not buckling on what he views as the core value of free speech" . (January 9, 2020 )"The moves come as the World Health Organization declared a global emergency" . (January 31, 2020 )"Facebook said it will pay $550 million over a lawsuit against its photo-labeling service" . (January 30, 2020 )
Posted on October 31, 2019 November 30, 2022 1 big thing , campaign advertising , facebook , illustrations , jack dorsey , mark zuckerberg , online platforms , twitter , visuals