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- YouTube was the slowest major platform to disallow misinformation during the 2020 U.S. election and almost three years later, the company will toss that policy out altogether. The company announced Friday that it would reverse its rules around election denialism, allowing some previously prohibited false claims, effective immediately. Axios first reported the changes. “In the […]
- YouTube rolls back its rules against election misinformation
- Gig workers get paid, Fidelity slashes Reddit’s valuation and AI conquers Minecraft
- Is AI ever too much AI?
- Deal Dive: Doing venture math on the non-alcoholic spirits industry
- Gary Vaynerchuk expects NFTs to expand beyond digital collectibles long term
- Tesla says all new Model 3s now qualify for full $7,500 tax credit
- T. Rowe Price has marked down its stake in Canva by 67.6%
- Competition concerns in the age of AI
- Meta found liable as court blocks firing of moderators
- This AI used GPT-4 to become an expert Minecraft player
- No one has done AR or VR well. Can Apple?
- How to prepare a hardware startup for raising a Series A
- Private lenders won’t fill the venture debt gap left by SVB
- Lenovo’s Yoga Book 9i realizes the full potential of a dual-screen laptop
- Snapchat’s AI bot isn’t very smart, but at least it won’t send nudes
- TechCrunch+ roundup: Rethinking PLG, AI-enabled SaaS pricing, traveling with a green card
- After Stratasys and Desktop Metal announce merger plans, 3D Systems proposes acquisition
- Scammers publish ads for hacking services on government websites
- AI doomerism is overblown and other TC news
- Inside Volkswagen’s big ID.Buzz bet
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