We saw this coming with President Trump and Elon Musk pummeling federal agencies including the EPA with budget and staffing cuts. DOGE kneecapped the agency after it cracked down on Musk’s companies, we reported last month. Health and environmental advocates are fighting the deregulatory spree at the EPA.
Politics Archive
Archives for May 2025

Leo XIV is the first pope with an online footprint, and it’s already defining his papacy… which is weird.


Despite President Trump’s lawsuits targeting the Paramount-owned CBS and 60 Minutes, the company said in its earnings report that it expects its deal with Skydance to close in the first half of this year. The WSJ reported in January that Paramount considered settling the lawsuit to “reduce friction” with the administration, and now both parties have begun mediation.
FCC Chair Brendan Carr has also suggested that the agency won’t approve mergers for companies with DEI policies, while specifically mentioning Paramount’s deal with Skydance, Bloomberg reported.
Schultz says when he took on the task of leading the company’s brand reputation, it was like “catching a falling knife.” But things have since gotten better. He says relative brand sentiment for Meta falls somewhere in the middle of other companies it measures against, putting it pretty close to the bank that in 2020 settled a criminal investigation with the US government over alleged fraud.
When Instagram ran a test showing one group more friends and family-focused content, it reported in 2016 that it found a 7 percent increase in time spent on the platform and a 7 percentage point increase in user retention. Turning to cross-examination, Meta’s attorney points out a lot has changed in the market since that period.
Meta CMO Alex Schultz is back on the stand after Mosseri finished testifying. In a 2014 email shortly after Facebook announced its WhatsApp acquisition, Schultz responded to an executive concerned that the Messenger team was “demotivated by the announcement.” Schultz said he was “more motivated than ever to still be working on messenger.” The first explanation he listed: “Have to keep things honest so the deal doesn’t fall through and prove there is competition.”
The FTC revisits the Kardashain-popularized meme pushing back on Instagram’s design overhaul that it later walked back. It’s walking through a 2022 interview with The Verge where Mosseri explained the decision. He testifies that people always complain about change, and that connecting with friends remains an important reason users come to the app, but Instagram has to to adapt the form in which they facilitate that in order to survive.
“I never met a creator who didn’t think they deserved more reach than they were getting,” Mosseri says. But the reality is, he adds, there’s two times as many creators this year than last, so the field is getting more and more saturated. “Even though Instagram might benefit, there are winners and losers within the creator ecosystem.”
Mosseri takes the jab at TikTok after the FTC asks about the reliability of TikTok’s data evaluating how much its features are used. The FTC may be underscoring a TikTok executive’s earlier testimony that it’s “friends” feed only makes up a small percentage of videos viewed on the app. That goes toward the FTC’s argument that users don’t primarily go to TikTok to connect with friends, as they more often do with Instagram.
That’s how Mosseri describes Facebook’s decision to buy Instagram in 2012. He says that both companies “benefited greatly” — Instagram, from Facebook’s resources and experience, and Facebook, from the founders’ talent for building compelling products.
Mosseri found himself in the middle of the tension between the two companies, having moved to Instagram from Facebook. He understood some of the concerns the Instagram founders had about things like discontinuing some links from Facebook to Instagram, and similarly disagreed with certain changes from Facebook, but “also thought they were being made more of than they needed to be.”
Interim US Attorney for Washington, DC Ed Martin is officially out of consideration for a permanent gig in the role thanks to pushback from Republican Senator Thom Tillis in particular. He may still resurface elsewhere at the Department of Justice, but for now, his threatening missives to DOGE critics and Wikipedia will not be missed.



