The satirical publisher The Onion reposted an old story in January 2025, after the Meta CEO announced the end of the company's fact-checking program.
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,
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said moving teams from California to Texas and other states would help address concerns of overcensorship on its platforms.
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.
In that spirit, on Tuesday he announced that the trust and safety teams who write content policy for Facebook, Meta, and Threads would be moving from California to Texas. Facebook’s content cops will trade In & Out for Whataburger.
Senator Markwayne Mullin told right-wing commentator Benny Johnson on an episode of The Benny Show Thursday that Zuckerberg had begun speaking regularly with the president-elect. “Mark met with President Trump the day before he announced that they were going to change the way they do censorship, essentially,” Mullin said.
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.
In $900,000 watches and gold chains, the Facebook founder looks and sounds very different to the kid in the grey T-shirt and hoodie
Zuckerberg told Joe Rogan that Apple hasn’t invented anything great in roughly two decades, since Steve Jobs created the iPhone.
Zuckerberg claimed to be “excited” by “the opportunity to restore free expression,” but few who commented on his speech felt similarly thrilled. Those on the left wrote him off as a sellout. Those on the right wondered where Zuckerberg’s principles were during the past four years of judicial persecution and censorship.
I think a lot of the corporate world is pretty culturally neutered,” the Meta CEO told Joe Rogan, a day after axing Meta's DEI programs. “... I think having a culture that celebrates aggression a bit more has its own merits that are really positive.
Mark Lemley said he could not “in good conscience” represent Mark Zuckerberg given recent decisions to "encourage disinformation and hate speech" on his company's platforms. A suit pending in Northern California alleges Meta infringed the copyrights of several authors by using their works to train its generative AI program.