It's estimated that over 600,000 people have fallen for the hoax post, which states that the poster does not give Meta or anyone else permission to use any of their personal data, profile information, or photos. The post has been prompted by the advice of an unnamed attorney, apparently.Read Entire ...
Read Also
- The Asus ExpertBook P5 proves Lunar Lake laptops aren’t created equal
- DC Studios’ Lanterns Show Has Reportedly Narrowed Down Its John Stewart Actor
- The JBL Partybox is $100 off today at Walmart — Great for parties
- Megalopolis review: Francis Ford Coppola’s flawed, insane sci-fi opus
- 73% of AI pros are looking to change jobs over the next year
- Do you really own the digital content you buy?
- Gmail's smart replies get smarter, but only for some users
- Pick Up This DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Drill for 45% off and Then Buzz It Twice as You Are Compelled To
- This robot arm can detach its hand to grab things out of reach
- TeamGroup shows off DDR5 kits with dual-mode overclocking support for Intel and AMD
Latest TechSpot
- TeamGroup shows off DDR5 kits with dual-mode overclocking support for Intel and AMD
- Samsung launches 990 Evo Plus NVMe SSDs with enhanced speed and thermal performance
- Trillion-transistor, multi-die chips inch closer with Synopsys and TSMC's latest updates
- "Goodbye Meta AI" message is a hoax, yet hundreds of thousands have fallen for it
- New LibreOffice release is out with over 80 bug fixes and enhanced stability
- "This is a big deal": Jensen Huang tries out Meta's new Orion AR glasses
- Samsung debuts AI-capable Galaxy S24 FE and two new MediaTek-powered tablets
- Russian cosmonaut sets new record by spending over 3 years of his life in space
- Consultant behind deepfake Biden robocalls hit with $6 million fine, faces criminal charges
- Nvidia RTX 5090 reportedly has 32GB of RAM on a 512-bit bus