Tag: Big tech

Total Results: 81


A homeless man walks down the street in the downtown Skid Row area of Los Angeles (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)
06/22/2021 - 1:06am

The battle between the two Americas The United States has never been so divided

Joel Kotkin

Monday, May 31

31.05

How Facebook censored the lab leak theory Its latest crackdown on 'misinformation' proves the tech giant hasn't learnt its lesson

Freddie Sayers

Tuesday, February 9

09.02

Facebook’s bid to control the internet Its new Oversight Board could make it more powerful than nation states

James Ball

Tuesday, February 2

02.02

What America can learn from Russia Spiralling addiction, inequality and an oligarch class can pave the way for authoritarianism

Daniel Kalder

Friday, January 29

29.01

The phoney War on Woke The Government's obsession with statues and street names is a dangerous distraction

Ed West

Monday, November 23

23.11

Welcome to the new Middle Ages Rising inequality, lower mobility, contempt for the poor and widespread celibacy — we're returning to the past

Ed West

Thursday, October 29

29.10

How corporations can delete your existence Losing a Twitter account for controversial statements is one thing; losing a bank account is quite another

Gavin Haynes

Tuesday, October 27

27.10

How Big Tech seduced the Left In the 1960s, liberals stood up to IBM to defend free speech. Now they cosy up to Silicon Valley

Geoff Shullenberger

Friday, October 16

16.10

Big Tech is fixing the election Social media sites such as Twitter have unprecedented power — and are using it to influence politics

Douglas Murray

Monday, July 13

13.07

Will Ireland survive the Woke Wave? If your economy is ruled from California, then your culture will be too

Angela Nagle

Tuesday, June 30

30.06

America is losing the information war With the election only five months away, the US has no idea how to defend itself against Russia

Nina Jankowicz

Tuesday, January 14

14.01

In defence of Facebook There are problems with Zuckerberg's monopolistic intentions, but breaking up his company could do more harm than good

Christopher Rhodes