Maria Ressa. (File Photo | AP)
World

Nobel winner Ressa says 'dangerous times' ahead after Meta ends US fact-checking

The veteran journalist and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021 said Meta's decision meant "extremely dangerous times ahead" for journalism, democracy and social media users.

Associated Press

Philippine Nobel laureate Maria Ressa warned Wednesday of "extremely dangerous times ahead" in an interview with AFP after social media giant Meta ended its US fact-checking program on Facebook and Instagram.

Ressa and the Rappler news site she co-founded have spent years fighting online disinformation while battling court cases filed under former Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte, whose drug war killed thousands of people.

The veteran journalist and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021 said Meta's decision meant "extremely dangerous times ahead" for journalism, democracy and social media users.

"Mark Zuckerberg says it's a free speech issue -- that's completely wrong," Ressa told AFP at Rappler's newsroom in Manila.

"Only if you're profit driven can you claim that; only if you want power and money can you claim that. This is about safety."

Five killed after IAF transport aircraft crashes in Assam's Jorhat airbase

US-Iran peace deal expected within 24 hours, says Pakistan PM Shehbaz Sharif

TMC civil war: Sudip Bandyopadhyay joins rebel MP Satabdi Roy to meet BJP leaders

Lt Gen Dhiraj Seth to succeed Gen Upendra Dwivedi as next Army Chief

'Pasting stickers on DMK's achievements': Udhayanidhi slams CM Vijay over claims at NITI Aayog meet

SCROLL FOR NEXT