News of the expansion came one day after news outlets reported that Twitter had accepted an obvious QAnon supporter into Birdwatch.
The man behind the documentary 'Unprecedented' says the former president was experiencing 'a real withdrawal' from social media during filming.
Researchers are concerned about the proliferators of the wild conspiracy are being boosted thanks to top-ranking political actors.
"This is not your show": Judge in Alex Jones' Sandy Hook defamation trial repeatedly warns the InfoWars host that he needs to tell the truth while testifying.
In the since removed posts, the self-described "super-hacker" used the n-word and claimed to have "invented covid."
Tests conducted by Gizmodo found users posting from less active accounts saw posts related to abortion pills removed for violating Facebook's drug rules.
The video includes never-before-seen footage of President Trump's attempted coup.
Greene's bill would attempt to classify social media platforms as common carries and prevent them from removing political content.
Former President Barack Obama reportedly lost thousands of followers overnight.
Twitter told the director of "Q: Into the Storm" it had "made the decision not to allow promotion of this documentary" when he tried to advertise the film.
If found guilty, the Georgia representative could be barred from holding office ahead of the November elections.
The social network's ranking change is meant to highlight original content, not compilations.
The company said it would also stop amplifying and recommending government accounts from Russia.
Groups users can now opt to automatically decline posts coming from sources Facebook fact-checkers have said contain false information.
There's even a conspiracy theory claiming Queen Elizabeth II actually died last year.
An Android app using a similar name to Trump's social media site has gotten well over 100,000 downloads and offers in-app purchases.
Attempts to bring Canadian truckers' 'freedom convoy' to the U.S. are mired in dysfunction.
Sadly, this isn't the first time that the National Butterfly Center has been forced to take cover from QAnon followers—and it likely won't be the last.
In 2022, right-wing extremists are increasingly decentralized, switching to new technologies like NFTs, and running for local office.
A Washington Post analysis shows that 47 far-right figures' followings on Gab, Gettr, Rumble and Telegram have largely flatlined.
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