Mark Zuckerberg



Digiday Editor in Chief Brian Morrissey says publishers were naïve if they didn’t think Facebook would eventually put its own interests above theirs.


Facebook says it doesn’t know who is behind the campaigns, but Russia seems like a good guess.




Facebook added 22 million new daily users last quarter, its smallest quarterly jump since at least 2011.


The social network’s last 18 months have been a waking nightmare. Wall Street doesn’t care.


The social messaging service has been blamed for its role in spreading dangerous and inaccurate information.


The Facebook founder has attracted controversy for how the social network deals with content that is offensive to many, such as Holocaust denying.


“And they do not share the values that we have.”


Facebook prefers to slow the spread of conspiracy theories. That’s better than outright banning them, said the social media kingpin.


No, Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t plan to fire himself.
Zuckerberg talks about everything from China to Infowars to whether he should be fired over the Cambridge Analytica scandal.


Match owns several of the world’s biggest dating sites and apps — including Tinder, Match.com and OKCupid — but now has to think of Facebook as a competitor.


Early Amazon employee Eugene Wei breaks down his theory of “invisible asymptotes” on the latest Recode Media podcast.


The bug affected 800,000 people and could have had serious safety implications.


He’s even wearing a tie.


Peters, the author of the seminal business book “In Search of Excellence,” says, “I weep for Santa Clara County.”


The longtime exec has been criticized recently for the social networking giant’s rocky responses to a series of controversies.


A software bug messed with privacy settings for 14 million users, so here’s what you need to know.


And now we’re seeing why that was a problem.


The Facebook CEO issued broad talking points instead of specific answers, and regulators weren’t happy.


Zuckerberg agreed to the meeting to “clarify issues related to the use of personal data.”

“The stakes are more intense than ever.”


The Facebook CEO is going abroad.


Thousands of apps have been reviewed, and 200 have been suspended pending further review.


The “Chaos Monkeys” author, who helped Facebook develop its ad-targeting system, busts some myths on the latest Too Embarrassed to Ask.


“After this huge thing happens — our country gets attacked — I think the customers would have been like, ‘Okay! That makes me feel like you’ve got it!’”


WhatsApp, Messenger and Facebook’s core app are getting new leaders as part of a massive executive reorg.


Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and Messenger are now all rolling up to Cox.


Plus other stuff you need to know about Facebook’s new push into online dating.


“Please don’t tank my videos.”


Facebook’s developer conference showed that Facebook is still Facebook.


It’s hiring thousands of people to avoid a repeat of 2016, says Mark Zuckerberg.


Sorry, Rupert Murdoch: Facebook isn’t a pay TV company.


“This is going to be for building real long-term relationships,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg said, “not just for hookups.”


It’s arguably the company’s biggest update since the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke.


Zuckerberg will try and convince us all at F8 that speed is still a good thing.


The rules may impact user growth in Europe, but otherwise Facebook doesn’t seem worried.


For the first time, Facebook appears to be closing itself up. So what happens next?


Facebook updated its content policy so people can see how it decides what to take down or leave up.