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Meta said Thursday that it would remove a dedicated section for news articles in April that will affect Facebook users in the United States and Australia. "The number of people using Facebook News in Australia and the U.S. has dropped by over 80% last year." Meta's decision to remove the Facebook News tab comes after the company said in September that it would eliminate the news section for Facebook users in the U.K., France and Germany. However, Meta said that it "will not enter into new commercial deals for traditional news content in these countries and will not offer new Facebook products specifically for news publishers in the future." A year ago, Facebook represented about 50% the media outlets' social traffic.
Persons: Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Jay Y, Lee, Meta, it's, Chartbeat, Similarweb, Mother Jones, Monika Bauerlein, Bauerlein, Sam Altman Organizations: Meta, Samsung Electronics, South Korean, Seoul Economic, Facebook, U.S, CNBC, Canadian, Nvidia Locations: South Korea, Seoul, United States, Australia, France, Germany
Meta's Mark Zuckerberg to visit South Korea
  + stars: | 2024-02-21 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Meta's Mark Zuckerberg plans to visit South Korea, scheduling key meetings during the trip, according to a statement by Meta on Wednesday, which did not provide further details. Meta's Mark Zuckerberg is planning to visit South Korea and is scheduling key meetings during his trip, Meta said in a statement on Wednesday without elaborating. The Meta CEO may also meet South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, the paper said. It would be his first known visit to South Korea since 2013. A presidential official confirmed that Zuckerberg had sought a meeting with Yoon, without providing further details.
Persons: Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Jay Y, Lee, Meta, Yoon Suk Yeol, Yoon Organizations: Meta, Samsung Electronics, South Korean, Seoul Economic, South, Samsung Locations: South Korea, Seoul, South Korean
SEOUL, Dec 26 (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) plans to increase chip production capacity at its largest semiconductor plant next year, despite forecasts of an economic slowdown, a South Korean newspaper reported late on Sunday. Samsung plans to expand its P3 factory in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, by adding 12-inch wafers capacity for DRAM memory chips, the Seoul Economic Daily reported, citing unnamed industry sources. It will also expand the plant with additional 4-nanometre chip capacity, which will be made under foundry contracts - that is, according to clients' designs - the paper said. P3, which started production of cutting-edge NAND flash memory chips this year, is the company's largest chip manufacturing facility. In October it said it was not considering intentionally cutting chip production, defying the broader industry's tendency to scale back output to meet mid- to long-term demand.
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