Musk’s gesture has received mixed reactions from politicians and academics, with some likening it to a Nazi salute and others saying it was an accidental action made in the heat of his victory speech.
Reddit is staying out of the current revolt against social media website X and, to a lesser degree, Meta, on its platform. Since Tuesday, hundreds of subreddits have discussed and/or implemented bans against the site formerly called Twitter, as reported by ...
In the fallout of Elon Musk’s baffling appearance during President Donald Trump’s inauguration, a curious new front in the ongoing online culture war has emerged: a push by Reddit sports mods and users to ban links to X (formerly known as Twitter).
Roth Capital Partners downgraded their investment rating on social media platform Reddit (RDDT) to "Neutral" from "Buy" on Wednesday.
Reddit signed deals with Google and OpenAI last year that allows the tech companies to train their AI models on Reddit content.
Reddit users call for a ban on X (formerly Twitter) links, citing Elon Musk's supposed nazi-gesture, leadership, interface changes, and far-right ties.
Techopedia interviews Jen Wong, Chief Operating Officer of Reddit, about how the company has adapted over 19 years — and how AI changes things.
Try a single issue or save on a subscription Issues delivered straight to your door or device Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked event is only a few hours away, but recent leaks have given us what could be our first look at the Samsung Galaxy S25 series.
A Reddit user shared a shocking baby name they came across online that sparked a debate about the legality of certain baby names in the US where naming is considered free speech
The woman says her husband's mother offered to pay for their hotel, then decided to join the trip A woman is taking to Reddit after discovering that her mother-in-law is planning to tag along for a portion of the international vacation she's taking with her husband — and she even plans to stay in the same hotel room.
“Reading cursive is a superpower,” Suzanne Isaacs, a community manager with the National Archives Catalog in Washington, D.C., told USA Today. “It’s not just a matter of whether you learned cursive in school, it’s how much you use cursive today.”