Meta's removal of fact-checking reshapes digital trust and responsibility. What it means for creators, audiences, and the ...
WIRED identified a handful of job listings posted to recruitment platforms by tech outsourcing companies in China this week for content moderators who can help manage the unexpected influx of ...
My concern, as Commissioner for Human Rights, is to help put human rights in the centre of the discourse. This is not to ...
Content moderation has always been a pit of despair ... term fix for having to deal with this unpleasant and thankless job. I can't help but imagine that another overhaul will come due sometime ...
Content moderation has always been a nightmare for ... term fix for having to deal with this unpleasant and thankless job. I can't help but imagine that another overhaul will come due sometime ...
Trump ally Elon Musk led the charge starting in 2022, when he acquired the platform then known as Twitter and slashed content-policy jobs and loosened content restrictions. In 2023, YouTube and ...
but I do content creation, so the aesthetic is there,” says Camille Barfield, a 26-year-old from Wilmington, North Carolina, who posted in the group after receiving a job offer in New York.
Shrinking or dismantling fact-checking and content moderation systems ... of the monetary and political costs of doing the jobs themselves, but also brings its own problems.
Zuckerberg also outlined how the company will overhaul its broader content-moderation system to allow ... and teaching jobs. We also allow the same content based on sexual orientation, when ...
Social-media companies are now pulling back on all of their content moderation on their platforms ... Twitter and slashing content-policy jobs and loosening content restrictions.
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, announced a major shift in content moderation policies across the ... while Chelsea face tricky away trip I Love My Job. It’s Ruining My Life.
The people who bear the brunt of making Facebook work will never make billions (or even pennies) from it. Plus: Nintendo’s self-confidence is working.