Our editorial: Facebook’s senior leadership testified in front of U.S. Congress last year. Neither Zuckerberg nor COO Sheryl Sandberg cared enough to offer Canadians the same courtesy.
The social media giant was finally called to answer to legislators for its conduct. Mark Zuckerberg couldn’t be bothered to show up.
Documents from a British parliamentary investigation show questions about access to user data caused RBC to end online transactions via Facebook
From 2016 to March 2018, federal government agencies spent more than $24.4 million on Facebook and Instagram ads and videos
The Facebook CEO spent just 15 minutes answering questions after he asked MEPs to list all their questions first.
Ron Tite rants about why you shouldn’t blame Facebook or Mark Zuckerberg for the Cambridge Analytica scandal, and why targeted advertising backed by real data on platforms like Facebook is actually amazing.
Congress hit Mark Zuckerberg with some searing questions on day two of his Facebook hearing.
Facebook’s CEO left a two-day trip to Washington with a long list of items that he promised to “follow up on” with senators and congressmen. We tallied them up.
Mark Zuckerberg’s five-hour Senate hearing about Facebook spawned a variety of face-palm-worthy moments. Here are the top six.
The Facebook CEO testifies at the House energy and commerce committee. Watch a livestream here at 10 a.m. ET.
Mark Zuckerberg was more Frankenstein than John D. Rockefeller as he begged forgiveness of U.S. senators, reports Allen Abel
Scott Gilmore: Facebook users are the ones who got dizzy and confused and decided to share their lives with strangers. Don’t blame Zuckerberg.