Mark Zuckerberg


They’re less certain that the government would be able to pull it off.


The EU’s data privacy rules — the GDPR — kick in on May 25. Since the U.S. Congress is unlikely to act, the EU rules will become the prevailing standard.


Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg spent 10 hours over two days getting gently grilled by lawmakers, and we were there.


Facebook knows a lot about you. But not because they are listening in.


Why are you seeing that ad? Because this is what Facebook thinks you like.


What difference does 10 hours of testifying makes? About 5 percent.


Teddy takes the Spotify questions while Kurt tackles the Facebook stuff.


Mark Zuckerberg’s former pollster has the data to prove it.


Zuckerberg survived Washington but what is Washington going to do about Facebook?


He was in the Washington hot seat to explain to lawmakers how Facebook collects and handles its users’ personal information.


The Facebook CEO is speaking during a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing.


Zuckerberg sounded smart, but it’s clear that politicians are looking for more ways to regulate.


The Facebook CEO is speaking during a Senate Judiciary Committee and Commerce Committee joint hearing.


You want to know.


As someone who made him do so once, I can attest that the formerly sweaty CEO won’t melt under the withering klieg lights of Congress.


Zuckerberg testifes this week. Here’s what to expect.


Identifying the other Facebook employees who are with Zuckerberg in D.C. this week.


The Facebook CEO faced Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg.


If you’ve been following Facebook closely since the election, you won’t find anything new in here.


“No backsies.”




He’ll testify before two Senate committees on Tuesday, and a House committee on Wednesday.


Translation: Facebook will be fine.


On Monday, April 9, you can find out if you were one of them.


Facebook sells ads to make its service free. “I don’t think at all that that means that we don’t care about people.”


Much as Tim Cook said last week, the legendary tech leader didn’t want anything to do with the social networking site either.


More political ad oversight, less fake news.


Sources say it’s likely. But why is it even something to debate?


Facebook stock was down 6 percent early on Monday.


“I promise to do better for you,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg says in the ads.


Many Facebook users understand that their data is being used — but the Cambridge Analytica scandal underscores just how far it can travel.


The House Energy and Commerce Committee sent Zuckerberg a formal letter Friday asking for testimony “in the near future.”


“Looks lame anyway,” Musk tweeted.


“I feel fundamentally uncomfortable sitting here in California in an office making content policy decisions for people around the world.”


“I think we let the community down, and I feel really bad and I’m sorry about that,” he said.


In a wide-ranging interview, the Facebook CEO admitted that the social networking giant may have made mistakes in opening up its network so much a decade ago.


“We have a responsibility to protect your data, and if we can’t then we don’t deserve to serve you.”


Facebook’s CEO has finally broken his silence.


Plus, four other questions we have for Facebook as it deals with its Cambridge Analytica data scandal.


That’s the stock’s biggest-ever two-day drop.