Former U.S. President Donald announced that he is filing a lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube and its respective Big Tech CEOs over issues concerning censorship.
Google-owned video services YouTube has announced plans to remove any content that questions Democratic nominee Joe Biden's win in this year's presidential election.
YouTube has removed more videos than ever for the second quarter of 2020. The company relied more on automated filters than human moderators due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Twitter announced that it could face up to $250 million as a fine to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for using users' phone numbers and email addresses for advertising gains, according to a CNN report.
Every culture and niche found its way into the platform and in recent years, several Latinas have made their mark on YouTube, handing the community videos for gaming, beauty, and others.
Tech giants Facebook, and Snapchat turned out to be the latest American companies that condemn racism in the United States as violent demonstrations ignited across major cities over George Floyd's death.
For YouTube, and the content producers that dominate the site, the line between giving producers the credit and revenue they deserve and overreaching with copyright law has become quite hard to delineate, if the Fine Brothers' recent controversy is any indication.
Even though it started out as a video streaming site, since its earliest days YouTube quickly became one of the top places to find music on the Internet. Now Google has embraced that long-running tradition, introducing on Thursday a dedicated place to get all the tunes available on YouTube: the YouTube Music app.
This week in social media, Facebook unveiled its latest push into online video, seeking to rob top rival YouTube of views. Meanwhile, Twitter went through some major company changes under new CEO Jack Dorsey and a new study surprised no one by revealing that teens prefer Instagram, with Snapchat right behind, over other social networks.