3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Social Media

The internet has been transformed by social media, and the many platforms are now critical to how we communicate online. The Verge keeps a close eye on everything that’s happening in the social media landscape, covering key players like Meta, X, and TikTok, reporting on new features, following cultural moments, and breaking down the policies that shape how the platforms work.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
America’s finest news source.

I like to think you can usually tell the difference between a Verge headline and an Onion one, but these days the lines are getting blurry.

endlessben:

I think you hit “Publish to The Verge” instead of “Publish to The Onion.” It’s ok, it happens.

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

Reality is losing the deepfake war
Play

Why you can’t label your way into consensus reality amid the AI deepfake apocalypse.

Nilay Patel
This Town, 2.0

Tech surrenders to the daily chaos of Washington politicking.

Tina Nguyen
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Spain could block teens from social media with an Australia-style ban.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez announced plans for the ban on Tuesday, vowing to protect children “from the digital wild west,” the New York Times reports. The policy would bar users under 16 from social media platforms, mirroring Australia’s ban, and would require platforms to have “effective age-verification systems.”

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Snapchat has blocked over 415,000 underage users in Australia.

The app began restricting access to users under 16 in compliance with Australia’s Social Media Minimum Age law. Though Snapchat says it will continue complying with the regulation, it argues that app store-level age verification is a better solution, helping to “ensure that young people encounter appropriate protections no matter where they go online.”

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
X is down.

After suffering multiple issues last month, X is down again to kick off February. Downdetector and NetBlocks both confirmed the outage. Users are reporting that the most recent posts they’re able to see are from an hour ago.

User reports indicate problems at X (Twitter)
Image: Downdetector / The Verge
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
From the mind behind the Metaverse.

Sorry to Zuck-dunk two days in a row, but it’s fair to say that when the Meta CEO predicts AI is the next big thing in social media, you should take it with a grain of salt.

Guillermo Esteves:

I definitely trust the visionary that brought us the Metaverse to tell me this is the future of social media.

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

The crypto bill is falling apart in Congress

A political comms professional breaks down Trump’s meme media strategy.

Tina Nguyen
Lauren Feiner
Lauren Feiner
TikTok moves to settle a major social media addiction case shortly before trial.

It follows Snap in reaching an agreement to resolve the first of several cases slated to go to trial this year about social media’s alleged harm to users, an attorney for the 19-year-old plaintiff confirmed. That leaves Meta and YouTube as defendants in the case going to jury selection today.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Is New TikTok banning the word “Epstein” in DMs? Not really.

Despite claims floating around social media, the truth is a bit more complicated, not least by the fact that TikTok in the US is still largely down, about a day and a half after its data center power outage problems started.

While tweets from random users, the governor of California, and PopBase claimed TikTok US DMs now censor “Epstein,” testing it from our end showed that its messaging feature bans many innocuous single-word messages, like “test.” Using the convicted sex offender’s name in a sentence, however, goes through unbanned.

A screenshot of a TikTok DM conversation showing messages for single words like “Epstein” and “test” are blocked, but using the word Epstein in a sentence is not, contrary to rumors claiming otherwise..
TikTok DM screenshot showing the words “Epstein” and “test” trip the service’s ban by themselves, but not in a sentence.
TikTok USA is brokenTikTok USA is broken
Dominic Preston
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
X is the latest social network to copy Bluesky’s starter packs.

Similar to starter packs on Bluesky, Threads, and Mastodon, X’s take on the feature will provide you with lists of accounts to follow based on what they post about, such as sports, video games, food, and more. Starter packs will roll out to all users in “the coming weeks.”

Image: X
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
The TikTok deal could finally close this week.

It’s been a long, confusing, and at times tiresome saga, but according to Semafor, the Chinese and U.S. governments have given the green light for ByteDance to sell TikTok’s American arm. The target closing date set back in December was today, January 22nd, 2026.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
“Try not to die.”

Meta has bet big on AI everything, but also has Instagram boss Adam Mosseri out there warning creators about its impact. One commenter (and occasional Verge contributor!) sums up its position nicely:

David Imel:

Meta: “We’re going to shove our AI models into everything we make so you use them as much as possible”

Meta: “AI is making it hard to tell what’s real. This is going to be a challenge for us and for you! Be careful and vigilant and try not to die”

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Threads’ ads are rolling out globally starting next week.

“Ads on Threads expansion to all users will be gradual, with ad delivery initially remaining low as we reach global user availability in the coming months,” Meta says. It started testing ads on the platform last year.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Snap reaches a settlement in a social media addiction lawsuit.

The settlement is happening “ahead of a landmark trial in a case that claims the social media giants engineered products to hook an entire generation of young users,” The New York Times reports. Meta, TikTok, and YouTube, who are also part of the case, haven’t yet settled. Mark Zuckerberg is expected to testify.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Bridge blocking.

Bridgy Fed, the open social web bridging tool, now lets users subscribe to fediverse domain blocklists to make it easier to mass block accounts. “When you add blocks or blocklists to your account on either side of the bridge, we maintain and sync those within Bridgy Fed,” according to a blog post.

Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
TikTok is taking a closer look at European users’ accounts with a new wave of age checks.

TikTok will roll out new age detection technology in Europe that uses profile information, posts, and “behavioral signals” to guess if a user is under 13, then flags suspected accounts for moderators to review, reports Reuters.

Google/YouTube announced similar age-estimating tech last year, amid lawsuits and an expanding push to “age-gate” the internet.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Live on Bluesky.

Bluesky is expanding the beta of its Live Now feature, which puts a red LIVE badge on your avatar when you’re streaming on Twitch, to all users. Bluesky initially announced the feature in May.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Bluesky advertises a solution to X’s Grok undressing people.

The solution is using Bluesky, of course. Naturally, a user with a blue check next to their name told Grok to put a bikini on the butterfly and the AI did — which seems like an even stronger advertisement for Bluesky than the one Bluesky itself posted.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
4.7 million accounts go dark.

That’s how many Australian social media accounts were removed in just the first few days after the country’s under-16 social media ban took effect in December, according to the Australian internet regulator. We already knew 550,000 of them were from Meta, but TikTok, Reddit, Snapchat and more were also covered by the ban.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The new Digg is launching an open beta.

With the launch, any user can start a community on “on nearly any topic,” according to TechCrunch. That would solve one of my biggest issues with the platform when I tested it last year. The public beta rollout is live now, Digg says.

Update: Digg posted about the beta.

Inside the White House shitposting machine

A political comms professional breaks down Trump’s meme media strategy.

Tina Nguyen
Tina Nguyen
Tina Nguyen
Give me your tired, your poor, your parasocial followers yearning for content:

Thanks to Donald Trump’s hardline immigration policies, it’s much harder for high-skilled tech workers to apply for the American H-1B visa these days. But a new type of tech worker visa is on the rise: Onlyfans creators and influencers are increasingly applying for (and receiving) O-1 visas, which were once reserved for individuals with “extraordinary ability or achievement” in fields such as the arts, motion pictures, television, sciences, education, business, or athletics.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
The kids are offline.

Following Australia’s social media ban for children under 16 taking effect last month, Meta says it has now removed almost 550,000 Instagram, Facebook, and Threads accounts that it believes were run by kids under that age threshold. Despite its compliance, Meta is still voicing opposition to the law.

A screenshot breaking down the figures of almost 550,000 accounts removed by Meta for under 16s in Australia.
I’m frankly shocked that so many youngsters had a Facebook account to begin with.
Image: Meta
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Don’t click anything in that Instagram password reset email, no matter how official it looks.

Seems a lot of people got password reset requests from Instagram over the last few days, including several Verge staffers and members of their family. The email might look legit. It might even have that little blue checkmark in Gmail. But, it probably came from a scammer. Honestly, it’s best practice to never click links in emails anyway.