But its latest policy elaborations may not satisfy its critics.
Original article Original article
Author: Axios
Smart, efficient news worthy of your time, attention, and trust
View all posts by Axios
Axios has recently written 10 articles on similar topics including :
"Facebook released a raft of small changes to its political ad rules, but not its "anything goes" content policy" . (January 9, 2020 )"Like the virus itself, its spread is hard to slow" . (January 30, 2020 )"Andrew Bosworth said he believes Trump's digital ad campaign won him the presidency" . (January 7, 2020 )"The streaming video platform is a $15 billion-a-year business, the company revealed" . (February 3, 2020 )"The moves come as the World Health Organization declared a global emergency" . (January 31, 2020 )"False information about the virus is spreading quickly" . (January 28, 2020 )"Many of the posts targeted President Trump's impeachment" . (December 28, 2019 )"The 2020 Democrats don't share the Obama administration's embrace of Big Tech" . (January 23, 2020 )"New policies will bar a wider set of manipulated and misleading video and audio posts" . (January 7, 2020 )"The social network also announced changes to its policies around election-related content" . (October 21, 2019 )
Posted on February 3, 2020 November 29, 2022 misinformation , online platforms , youtube