Policy
Tech is reshaping the world — and not always for the better. Whether it’s the rules for Apple’s App Store or Facebook’s plan for fighting misinformation, tech platform policies can have enormous ripple effects on the rest of society. They’re so powerful that, increasingly, companies aren’t setting them alone but sharing the fight with government regulators, civil society groups, and internal standards bodies like Meta’s Oversight Board. The result is an ongoing political struggle over harassment, free speech, copyright, and dozens of other issues, all mediated through some of the largest and most chaotic electronic spaces the world has ever seen.

The state is counting on Rivian’s $120 million investment in the project to attract global investment and create new jobs.

The lawsuit says the Trump administration is meddling with states’ efforts to build out new energy projects.
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A 2014 chat log between Systrom and Deng seems to undercut Deng’s testimony that he doesn’t recall Meta scaling back growth resources for Instagram. Deng says he doesn’t have enough context to confirm what he and Systrom were discussing, but described the chat as a “knee-jerk reaction” to an email they mentioned at the time. “Am I reading correctly we now have less growth support, not more?” Systrom asked. “This isn’t great for us,” Deng wrote at the time.
Deng, who moved to Instagram in 2013 until 2015 after working on Facebook Messenger, is challenging Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom’s testimony that the app could have reached the same success without Meta and that the company deprived it of resources. Deng says Meta helped Instagram with speeding up high quality hiring, and sharing infrastructure and growth team staff. Still, Deng left Instagram several years before Systrom departed the company.


Deng, who led product for Facebook’s messenger product in the early 2010s, says he was not worried about WhatsApp growing into a big rival in the US. Since many people in the US had iPhones where they could send mobile messages including photos through iMessage, he says, “people just expected more here than just text messaging,” which was the focus of the simple WhatsApp service. “There’s nothing about what they did that signaled they remotely wanted to get into more expressive messaging.” he says.


Former product executive Peter Deng warned colleagues about the existential threat of mobile messaging apps moving into Facebook’s core space. In an October 2012 email, he called messaging rivals “the biggest threat to our product that I’ve ever seen in my 5 years here at Facebook; it’s bigger than G+, and we’re all terrified,” he wrote, referring to Google’s now-defunct social media competitor. “These guys actually have a credible strategy: start with the most intimate social graph (i.e. The ones you message on mobile), and build from there.” Deng testifies he was referring to the three mobile apps that had started adding such features, and not the one Facebook ultimately acquired: WhatsApp.


During an interview on NBC’s Meet the Press, President Donald Trump said he’d “be willing” to extend TikTok’s June 19th deadline if its China-based parent company, ByteDance, doesn’t reach a deal to divest the app’s US business in time. China backed out of a potential deal last month after Trump imposed up to 145 percent tariffs on goods imported from the country.
[bloomberg.com]


During its Search antitrust trial yesterday, a DOJ attorney produced a document showing that “80 billion of 160 billion ‘tokens’ — snippets of content — after filtering out the material that publishers had opted out of allowing Google to use for training its AI,” according to Bloomberg.
But that opt-out only applies to DeepMind models, Bloomberg reports — when asked if “the search org has the ability to train on the data that publishers had opted out of training,” DeepMind VP Eli Collins replied, “Correct — for use in search.”


For anyone who caught some of our stories about Trump’s first 100 days in office this week, I went on Decoder to talk a little more about the issues that six of our writers explored. For anyone who didn’t, I make the case for why you should check them out!


After Hyundai started making them in the USA, the popular EV became briefly eligible — but mysteriously lost eligibility weeks later, possibly over its batteries. Now, the Ioniq 5 is finally back on the list, until or unless Trump kills the credit entirely. It may not make a difference for many buyers: Hyundai was already offering its own $7,500 discount as a stopgap until the credit came back online.





A look at some of the things Trump has — and sometimes hasn’t — broken in 100 days
“The report reads less like a medical analysis and more like an anti-trans screed—politicized, inflammatory, and devoid of scholarly grounding,” writes journalist Erin Reed in comprehensively fact-checking the 400-page document.
The HHS report has also been repudiated by the medical community. “This report misrepresents the current medical consensus and fails to reflect the realities of pediatric care,” Susan Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said in a statement yesterday.


Drop-shipping packages straight from China to shoppers’ homes was kind of the whole point of retailers like Temu. In response to Donald Trump’s tariffs, Temu now tells Wired that it’s switching to a “local fulfillment model” where orders come from US warehouses. With the de minimis exception officially dead (at least for now), it’s no surprise that retailers are scrambling — especially sites like Temu, whose wide product offerings depended on the exception.










Per The New York Times:
When big law firms attacked by President Trump decided to make a deal with him rather than fight, many did so because their leaders feared that clients would abandon a firm caught on the administration’s bad side.
Now that logic may be getting less compelling.




In between insisting that corporations need to end DEI efforts, Starbuck is suing because Meta AI “repeatedly published—and continues to publish—provably false and defamatory statements falsely accusing Starbuck of participating in the January 6th Capitol riot and having been arrested for a misdemeanor.”
Meta global policy head Joel Kaplan -- who said in January its products would have “no new fact checks and no fact checkers” -- apologized for the incorrect results. Does anyone have an idea about how the company could avoid this kind of problem?
Former TikTok director of UX research Eric Morrison testifies in a short video deposition that as of 2022, unlike Facebook and Instagram, TikTok “was not necessarily serving that need to connect to people that you already know.” This is the need that the FTC says Facebook and Instagram uniquely fill, alongside the smaller apps Snapchat and MeWe.
Donald Trump announced Thursday that he would remove Michael Waltz as National Security Advisor and appoint him as ambassador to the United Nations. CBS reported earlier that Trump did not want to explicitly fire Waltz, the person who accidentally added The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg to the group chat, but waited several weeks before he could spin the demotion as part of a reorganization strategy at the National Security Council.
Hegeman says that the (not publicly disclosed) number of users who opted out of off-app tracking through Apple’s App Tracking Transparency policy mostly reflects Apple’s scare tactics in framing the question to users, rather than whether users actually prefer not to share their data with Meta. He adds that Apple frames the ask very differently when asking users about similar opt-ins for its own products. “I think it’s a clear example of them trying to leverage their position controlling the iOS operating system to advantage their position in the market,” he says.
Sometime after 2018, Meta realized that focusing on surfacing friends and family content wasn’t helping it as much as it had hoped. Competitors like TikTok were taking over a lot of time users would spend online, and Hegeman says Meta found it to be a better strategy to broaden the focus of the Facebook app to include investments in video and other kinds of content.
In 2021, Meta found that by reducing the relative amount of ads some groups saw by 80 percent, it only saw about a 3 percent increase of a usage metric. This shows ads aren’t a major cost for consumers, Hegeman says, because if a company like Apple lowered the price of its iPhone by 80 percent, it would likely see much more than a 3 percent increase in sales.