“But I will say not all immigrants are gang members. Not all immigrants are like a criminal. Some of them, just like me and my wife, and other people, they are coming here just to have a better life.”
companies support putting the onus on app stores to verify ages amid criticism that they don’t do enough to make their products safe for children — or verify that no kids under 13 use them.Instagram will also send notifications to parents “with information about how they can have conversations with their teens on the importance of providing the correct age online,” the company said.
Friday from President Donald Trump’s move to instituteon Truth Social that erroneously claimed legendary investor Warren Buffett praised his recent economic policies.Here’s a closer look at the facts.
CLAIM: Warren Buffett said President Donald Trump is “is making the best economic moves he’s seen in 50 years.”THE FACTS: This is false. Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett’s company,
shortly after Trump posted the video, calling reports on social media attributing comments to Buffett “false.” Buffett told a reporter Friday that he won’t be commenting on the economy until Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting later this spring.
“There are reports currently circulating on social media (including Twitter, Facebook and TikTok) regarding comments allegedly made by Warren E. Buffett. All such reports are false,” reads the Berkshire Hathaway statement.Meta is making the move after launching its Meta AI assistant last month for European users, long after it rolled out to the United States and other major markets.
The company’s AI training efforts had been hampered by stringent European Union data privacy laws, which give people control over how their personal information is used. Vienna-based group NOYB, led by activist Max Schrems, had complained to various national privacy watchdogs about Meta’s AI training plans and urged them to stop the company before it started training its next generation of AI models.Meta noted that a panel of EU privacy regulators in December “affirmed” that its original approach met legal obligations.
The company said it won’t use private messages to train its AI model and repeated its point that it is merely following the example of rivals Google and OpenAI, “both of which have already used data from European users to train their AI models.”Meta said it will start notifying users in the EU about the training, and will include a link to a form where they can object at any time.