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The world’s largest social network has more than 2 billion daily users, and is expanding rapidly around the world. Led by CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook undergirds much of the world’s communication online, both through its flagship app and its subsidiaries Instagram, WhatsApp, and Oculus. Despite huge financial success, Facebook is also confronted with questions about data privacy, hate speech on the platform, and concerns that frequent social media use can lead to unhappiness. The Verge publishes a nightly newsletter about Facebook and democracy, subscribe here.

Meta’s Forum is part Reddit, part Facebook, and part Google AI Overview

Forum’s revival of Facebook’s discontinued Groups app includes an AI chatbot for searching through group posts.

Stevie Bonifield
Snap, YouTube, and TikTok settle suit over harm to students

This is the first of 1,200 school districts facing off against social media companies.

Terrence O'Brien

Latest In Facebook

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Meta’s new app, Forum, is focused on Facebook groups.

The app, available on iOS, lets you browse groups that you’re a part of, make posts to groups, and ask questions to a chatbot to get information sourced from groups. Saw this one thanks to Matt Navarra.

Screenshots from the App Store listing for Forum.
Screenshots from the App Store listing for Forum.
Image: Meta
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
With mass layoffs plannned, Meta reassigns thousands of employees to AI initiatives.

The New York Times and Reuters report that a memo was sent to Meta employees on Monday reassigning 7,000 of them, and said that “As org leaders worked on the changes, many of them incorporated AI native design principles ⁠into their new org structures.”

The memo told employees to work remotely on Wednesday, when it will lay off about 10 percent of its workforce, roughly 8,000 people, with emails sent at 4AM local time.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Meta removes ads from lawyers seeking plaintiffs for social media addiction cases.

Now that a jury has ruled against Meta and YouTube in a landmark trial, the sharks are circling, and what better place to find potential clients than on those social media platforms? The only problem is that Axios reports Meta pulled “more than a dozen” such ads from firms like Morgan & Morgan and Sokolove Law on Thursday.

A jury says Meta and Google hurt a kid. What now?
Play

Why nuclear options like age limits and repealing Section 230 won’t make social media safer.

Nilay Patel
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Meta says its AI moderation systems will replace contractors over the next few years.

Last year, content moderators who’ve risked consequences like PTSD working for Big Tech companies have started to organize for better treatment in the last several years. Now, Meta has announced a wide rollout of its AI support assistant for Facebook and Instagram, and that it will “reduce our reliance on third-party vendors” employing humans for content enforcement.

While we’ll still have people who review content, these systems will be able to take on work that’s better-suited to technology, like repetitive reviews of graphic content or areas where adversarial actors are constantly changing their tactics, such as with illicit drugs sales or scams.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Facebook was reportedly having some issues earlier.

At around 5:30PM ET, Downdetector showed a recent peak of more than 11,000 user reports of problems, but reports of issues have fallen dramatically. At 5:48PM ET, NetBlocks said the platform was experiencing “international outages.” A Meta status page was showing “high disruptions” for Facebook Ads Manager, including ads creation and delivery, but that has been “resolved.”

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
The kids are offline.

Following Australia’s social media ban for children under 16 taking effect last month, Meta says it has now removed almost 550,000 Instagram, Facebook, and Threads accounts that it believes were run by kids under that age threshold. Despite its compliance, Meta is still voicing opposition to the law.

A screenshot breaking down the figures of almost 550,000 accounts removed by Meta for under 16s in Australia.
I’m frankly shocked that so many youngsters had a Facebook account to begin with.
Image: Meta
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Facebooks Groups are getting usernames.

Members can now post under a nickname, along with a custom avatar, though admins have to approve them first. It’s a small step towards Discordification for Facebook, which has otherwise always insisted on posting under real names.

Images showing options to create nicknames in Facebook Groups.
I hope you like animals in sunglasses.
Image: Meta
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The Facebook Like buttons on websites that aren’t Facebook are going away.

So are external comment buttons, according to Meta. They’ll be discontinued on February 10th, 2026, and starting on that date, they’ll render instead as a 0 x 0 pixel to prevent causing errors.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Job ad algorithms are still sexist.

So says France’s equality watchdog, ruling Meta needs to improve its job listings, where mechanic roles are mostly being shown to men, with preschool teacher ads going to women. We’ve been talking about sexism in job algorithms for a decade now, including at Facebook, but apparently some things never change.

Facebook is adding job listings, againFacebook is adding job listings, again
Allison Johnson
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Facebook and Instagram can now automatically translate and dub reels in Hindi and Portuguese.

Meta’s AI translation feature initially worked with English and Spanish.

Facebook is turning into TikTokFacebook is turning into TikTok
Jay Peters
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Facebook, please stop trying to bring back poking.

The platform has added a new “poke” button directly to users’ profiles, as spotted earlier by TechCrunch. You can track all your pokes and build up a “poke count” on a dedicated page that just reminded me of everyone who poked me in 2010.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
About that “16 billion passwords” data breach.

The original source of the report, Cybernews, says that since the start of the year, its researchers have “discovered 30 exposed datasets containing from tens of millions to over 3.5 billion records each. In total, the researchers uncovered an unimaginable 16 billion records.”

This isn’t a breach of one company or another’s systems, but compiled records, with some believed to be from “infostealer” malware, as well as previous leaks. As Bleeping Computer points out, what you should be doing hasn’t changed -- using unique passwords with a password manager, enabling two-factor authentication, and adding other forms of security like passkeys and security keys that can replace passwords altogether.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
The Zuck of this profile will feel familiar...

to readers of Katherine Losse’s The Boy Kings. The Financial Times makes a compelling case that loser-bro Zuck is who he has always been. Also, his feelings were very hurt when we all had a good laugh about Meta’s avatars (“Legs coming soon!”). No wonder he wants AI friends, who’ll never mock him like that.