
Meta Will Fight Ofcom Over the Math, Just Not the Censorship
The company that could most credibly challenge Britain’s online speech regime is instead asking a London court to please use a different revenue column.
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The company that could most credibly challenge Britain’s online speech regime is instead asking a London court to please use a different revenue column.

The company that decides whether you’re a bot now also requires you run its software to prove otherwise.
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Brussels wants to close the VPN loophole, even as it insists its official age verification app remains a mere suggestion.

The €1.2 billion deal hands one vendor the biometric thread that links your boarding pass, your passport, and your hotel key card.

The injunction lands the same week the Justice Department joined xAI’s side, marking the first federal intervention in a state AI lawsuit.

Jawboning got its own House resolution and this time the targets have names.

The bill that promises not to surveil Canadians requires a year of every Canadian’s location data sitting on private servers.

The bill defunds the same disinformation programs that Washington spent the last decade building.

Brussels just told Meta that asking users their birthday isn’t a verification system and the fix means every social media account becomes either a behavioral surveillance file or a government ID check.

Compliance sits at 27% and the model says it has further to fall.

Half the user base is now living on a degraded version of the platform until they hand over biometric data.

Every American who wants to ask a chatbot for help would need to upload a government ID, scan their face, or hand over a financial record first.
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