#image_title
Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, spoke directly to victims and their family members as he testified during the US Senate judiciary committee hearing on Wednesday.
After an intense line of questioning by the Republican senator Josh Hawley, who asked Zuckerberg if he would like to apologise to families of victims who were sitting in the audience holding photos of children they say died or were harmed due to his platform, Zuckerberg stood up and faced them.
Subscribe to Guardian News on YouTube ► http://bit.ly/guardianwiressub
The Guardian publishes independent journalism, made possible by supporters. Contribute to The Guardian today ► https://bit.ly/3uhA7zg
Sign up to the Guardian’s free new daily newsletter, First Edition ► http://theguardian.com/first-edition
Website ► https://www.theguardian.com
Facebook ►https://www.facebook.com/theguardian
Twitter ► https://twitter.com/guardian
Instagram ► https://instagram.com/guardian
The Guardian on YouTube:
The Guardian ► https://bit.ly/guardiannewssubs
Guardian Australia ► https://bit.ly/guardianaussubs
Guardian Football ► https://bit.ly/gdnfootballsubs
Guardian Sport ► https://bit.ly/gdnsportsubs
Guardian Live ► https://bit.ly/guardianlivesubs
#Zuckerberg #Meta #Instagram #SocialMedia #Politics #News
source
Australia invests $20M for new health AI projects The Australian government has awarded 10 AI…
Canadian doctors and brain injury experts believe Canadian Football League players should be encouraged to use…
Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet…
The Department of Social Welfare and Development’s (DSWD) Strategic Communications (StratComm) group holds the last…
As the war enters its 861st day, these are the main developments.Here is the situation…
Wherever the JWST looks in space, matter and energy are interacting in spectacular displays. The…
This website uses cookies.