There was a time when Mark Zuckerberg didn’t regard mainstream media as the enemy. He even allowed me, a card-carrying legacy media person, into his home. In April 2018, I ventured there to hear his plans to do the right thing.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has had a busy few weeks. In addition to doing away with Facebook’s independent fact-checking team and loosening its platforms’ policies on hateful speech, he’s headlined a personal public relations blitz that used Tahoe as a prop and a cringey appearance on “The Joe Rogan Experience” as a diary.
Zuckerberg said the workforce has been "culturally neutured." With anti-DEI rhetoric on the rise, will women feel the impact?
Chamath Palihapitiya weighed in on the actions of Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk amid the political resurgence of Donald Trump.
The Meta CEO's comments on masculinity ignore the reality of systemic inequality and the harms of reinforcing aggressive corporate culture.
Meta is reportedly set to cut around five percent of its workforce. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the company will lay off the lowest performers.
I have fired Meta as a client,” Lemley wrote on Bluesky, the platform which has emerged as an alternative to X for left-leaning internet users
One might assume that Mark Zuckerberg’s houses consist primarily of sleek Silicon Valley mansions. That’s not wrong—the Facebook (now known as Meta) founder does own a compound not far from his office—but as his fortune has grown over the years,
This week on the Joe Rogan Experience, a gold chain-adorned Mark Zuckerberg said he felt the corporate world had become “culturally neutered” and that corporate culture had strayed too far from “masculine energy.” As a woman who spent 15 years working in the tech industry, I absolutely disagree.
On Joe Rogan’s podcast, Zuckerberg made it clear he was ready to do business: In his peculiar black T-shirt and gold chain — like a balky child of the suburbs straining for some nebulous urban cred — he railed against the Biden administration and affirmed,