Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Saturday said Facebook is back in negotiations with the government
Facebook has publicly indicated no change in its opposition to a proposed law requiring social media platforms to pay for links to news content
House antitrust panel to consider legislation that may curb the companies' dominance; hearings slated for next week
Social media giant faces backlash over its bid to 'bully' Australia; UK expresses concern
Says private sector needs to have more transparency in building a trustworthy ecosystem
Companies being more transparent about their frameworks, Facebook India Managing Director Ajit Mohan said
The fight between the world's largest social media company and the 13th-largest economy is the result of a bill, scheduled for debate next week in Australia's Senate
Facebook has been in a defensive crouch amid a slew of privacy scandals, antitrust lawsuits and charges that it was letting hate speech and extremism destroy democracy.
Facebook increased its revenue by allegedly using deeply wrong ad metrics and failed to correct inflated numbers owing to fake and duplicate accounts, company employees have claimed in a court filing
Prime Minister Scott Morrison described Facebook''s move Thursday to prevent Australians accessing and sharing news as a threat
This will be the seventh time Zuckerberg has testified before Congress since 2018
Here's a selection of Business Standard opinion pieces for the day
Govt hits out at tech giant after emergency sites blocked over decision on proposed media law
Despite becoming a hit early on thanks to quirky stickers and a privacy feature that let teenagers hide chats from parents, Hike's messenger app overtime failed to challenge the popularity of WhatsApp
Along with Google owner Alphabet, it now controls more than half of the digital advertising markets globally
In Australia, Facebook has blocked access to news on its platform. More on that story in our top headlines
Facebook's reach in Australia is powerful. It has more than 11 million users in a population of 25 million
The social media platform's 17 million users in Australia are now unable to share any news
Sir Timothy Berners-Lee says Australian plans to make digital giants pay for journalism could set a precedent that renders the Internet as we know it unworkable
Australia's government said the ban threatened Facebook's "credibility"