Social MediaCultureFacebook’s New Plan May Curb Revenge Porn, But Won't Kill ItBy Emma Grey EllisCultureEveryone Loses When Your Employer Owns Your Facebook AccountBy Emma Grey EllisCultureRIP, Twitter Egg. It Was Good Knowing You, However AnonymouslyBy Peter Rubin and Brian RafteryScienceSocial Media Influencers Finally Come to ... MedicineBy Megan MolteniGearFacebook Messenger Finally Makes Group Chat Not a Total HassleBy Paul SarconiSecurityInstagram Has Two-Factor Authentication Now, So Turn It OnBy Brian BarrettDesignThe Hidden Breakthrough in Apple's New Video AppBy Margaret RhodesBusinessLinkedIn Tries to Do Trending News in a Non-Disastrous WayBy Davey AlbaCultureIt’s Time for Facebook to Deal With the Grimy History of Revenge PornBy Emma Grey EllisCultureSnap's IPO Made Its Employees Millionaires—Why Not DJ Khaled?By Dan RuncieCultureMemes Are Helping People of Color Cope With the Trump EraBy Ludmila LeivaBusinessTwitter (Finally!) Takes Aim at Anonymous Egg AccountsBy Davey AlbaBusinessInternet Bots Fight Each Other Because They're All Too HumanBy Matt SimonBusinessIs Trump Hate-Tweeting You? Find Out if It's Really a CrisisBy Issie LapowskyBusinessIs Posting on Facebook a Fundamental Right?By Issie LapowskyBusinessMark Zuckerberg's Answer to a World Divided by Facebook Is More FacebookBy Cade MetzThe Big StoryFor Nextdoor, Eliminating Racism Is No Quick FixBy Jessi HempelThe Big StoryPolitics Have Turned Facebook Into a Steaming Cauldron of HateBy Jessi HempelCultureThe Machinery Is in Place to Make Trump Protests PermanentBy Issie LapowskyBusinessApps Make Pestering Congress So Easy That Politicians Can't Keep UpBy Klint FinleyBusinessFacebook Reboots Trending Topics—Again—as Fake News FestersBy Davey AlbaCultureA Sign of the Times: If You’re Gonna Protest, You Best Bring the PunsBy Charley LockeSecuritySocial Media Made the World Care About Standing Rock—and Helped It ForgetBy Emily DreyfussBusinessThe Women’s March Defines Protest in the Facebook AgeBy Issie LapowskyMore Stories