
2 are before the president-elect Donald Trump takes office, the company "Meta", which owns Facebook and Instagram, announced a series of changes.
Zuckerberg has launched a "revolution" in content moderation practices that ends its longstanding fact-checking program, a policy designed to limit the spread of misinformation across its social media apps. .
The announcement was made through a video by the head of the "Meta" company, Mark Zuckerberg.
"We consider the recent elections as a cultural turning point. We are going back to our roots and will focus on reducing errors, simplifying our policies and taking care of freedom of expression on our platforms ," he said.
For many analysts, this was another bow to Donald Trump, who has repeatedly accused Facebook of censoring free speech. He even threatened Zuckerberg before the election that he would arrest him if he influenced the election through censorship.
After Trump's re-election, Zuckerberg met with the new president. Last week, Meta's chief executive of global affairs, Nick Clegg, announced his departure, to be replaced by Joel Kaplan, a Republican who has been supportive of claims that the platform has suppressed conservative voices.
After the meeting, Kaplan and Zuckeberg hailed Trump as a champion of free speech, but made no mention of the president-elect's attacks on Meta.
Zuckerberg said fact-checking would be replaced by a "more comprehensive system of community annotations," similar to what Elon Musk has put in place since he bought Twitter, later renamed X.
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