The previous administrationβs progressive lexicon has been swept away, replaced by a new official language of a bureaucracy under fire from its own president.
In a meeting with Meta employees on Thursday, Mr. Zuckerberg also doubled down on recent changes to the companyβs online speech policies and ending its diversity initiatives.
The executive order was among several the president signed meant to steer American schools and universities to adopt Republican priorities, such as restricting how schools discuss racism and gender issues.
A unanimous Supreme Court on Friday upheld a law that effectively bans the wildly popular app TikTok in the United States starting on Sunday, Jan. 19. Adam Liptak, who covers the Supreme Court for The New York Times, explains how free speech and national security collided in this decision.
After visiting President-elect Donald J. Trump in November, Mr. Zuckerberg decided to relax Metaβs speech policies. He asked a small team to carry out his goals within weeks. The repercussions are just beginning.
The justices are expected to rule quickly in the case, which pits national security concerns about China against the First Amendmentβs protection of free speech.
The social networking giant will stop using third-party fact checkers and instead rely on users to add notes to posts. President-elect Trump and his conservative allies said they were pleased.
Mr. Musk has fallen out with prominent right-wing Americans who say they are worried that their agenda may be sidelined in favor of his own β and that he is willing to silence them on X.
The briefs, filed a week before oral arguments, offered sharply differing accounts of Chinaβs influence over the site and the role of the First Amendment.
President-elect Donald J. Trumpβs picks for the F.C.C. and F.T.C. have vowed to remove censorship online. That conflicts with European regulators who are pushing for stricter moderation.
The president-elect took no position on the appβs First Amendment challenge to the law, which sets a Jan. 19 deadline to sell or close the popular platform.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments next month in First Amendment challenges to laws banning the app and shielding minors from sexual materials on the internet.