President Trump said MSNBC is "even worse than CNN" and "shouldn't even have a right to broadcast -- Only in America!"
NBC's Seth Meyers and Comcast are the latest targets of the president-elect's criticism following Jimmy Kimmel and "60 Minutes."
In November, Comcast confirmed it would spin off most of its cable TV networks into a separate publicly traded company known as SpinCo. This includes MSNBC, CNBC, the USA Network, Oxygen, E!, SYFY, and the Golf Channel.
Meta has settled a lawsuit brought by Donald Trump after the social media giant suspended him from their Facebook and Instagram platforms following the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol. As part of the agreement,
Donald Trump was inaugurated as the United States' 47th President, taking office amid a promise to usher in a new 'golden age of America'. Here is a timeline of how the day unfolded in Washington, DC.
Donald Trump announced Senate aide Olivia Trusty as his pick for FCC commissioner, giving Republicans a majority at the regulatory agency.
Trump's plan for widespread buyouts raises plenty of questions.
With Federal Reserve policy likely paused until midyear and megacaps throwing up a mixed bag of results so far, stock markets stayed calm overnight as attention switches to European interest rates and a fourth-quarter U.S. GDP healthcheck.
The president had sued the social-media company after his accounts were suspended following the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.
On Tuesday night, President Donald Trump issued a pardon to Ross Ulbricht, who ran the dark web marketplace Silk Road under the pseudonym “Dread Pirate Roberts.” Ulbricht has been serving a life sentence without parole since 2015, when he was convicted of multiple charges, including the distribution of narcotics.
Meta agreed to a $25 million settlement over a 2021 lawsuit President Donald Trump brought against Meta for suspending his accounts after the January 6th insurrection at the US Capitol. The Wall Street Journal was the first to report the news, and Meta spokesperson Andy Stone confirmed the settlement to The Verge.
President Donald Trump has reportedly signed settlement papers expected to require Meta Platforms to pay approximately $25 million to resolve a 2021 lawsuit he filed after the company suspended his accounts following the riot at the U.S. Capitol that year. The Associated Press said it spoke with three sources familiar with the agreement.