Mr Beast, one of YouTube’s biggest stars, sparked a heated debate on January 11 when he released a video titled I Helped 2,000 People Walk Again.
Reddit leads in search visibility growth, according to a SISTRIX report, raising questions about Google's preferences for user-generated content (UGC).
Subreddits devoted to sports, videogaming and even geographic areas have opted to block links to Musk's X social network.
If you have been adding salt to your pasta water to make it boil faster or tossing pasta at the wall to check if it's done, you are not alone. These are just a couple of the many pasta myths that have been passed down over time, but it's now time to uncover the truth about one of the world's most beloved foods.
A ban on links to X content began on Reddit sports forums and has spread to numerous other sub-Reddits with more discussing the move.
A software engineer shares how he manages five side hustles that collectively bring in more money than his six-figure job. Automation is the key.
Lawmakers attempting to regulate children’s access to social media must decide whether bans or warning labels are the optimal route for keeping kids safe.
With a possible ban looming for the popular short-form video app, these stocks are set to gain as companies look to capture TikTok users' screen time.
YouTuber MrBeast has accused Reddit’s r/YouTube community of censoring his post about helping people with prosthetic legs. For the unversed, MrBeast recently uploaded a video titled “I Helped 2,000 People Walk Again,
As some of the responses to the opening post point out, what’s more mystifying is that YouTube TV does have a live button on other platforms. On desktop or mobile, hitting this button can get you back to the live feed in a single click, so it’s hard to understand why the same feature couldn’t be added to the smart TV version.
MrBeast has call out r/YouTube after a post about him got deleted, prompting a response from YouTube itself on the subject.
Like Mufasa in The Lion King, recent trailers uploaded to the Nintendo of America YouTube channel suddenly face a stampede of buffalo. Unlike The Lion King's, these water buffalo are specifically meant to be "kind" and "funny," their invasion sparked by a Reddit meme that has quickly taken on a life of its own.