Best Podcast Episodes About Mark Zuckerberg

Best Podcast Episodes About Mark Zuckerberg

Everything podcasters are saying about Mark Zuckerberg — curated from top podcasts

Updated: Apr 28, 2026 – 95 episodes
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Ridealong has curated the best and most interesting podcasts and clips about Mark Zuckerberg.

Top Podcast Clips About Mark Zuckerberg

Your Undivided Attention
“… And they're not liable if they can't look. And I suspected that a lot of that had to do with trying to avoid liability. We heard the Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, said that Facebook will become a privacy-focused social network. Does that make sense to you? How do you interpret that? Well, the issue is that they're trying to avoid liability. I'm sure there's many things that there are good reasons for doing what they're doing. But when they move all this, you know, the Russian hacking, the pedophilia stuff, all this stuff that's going on in these different groups, when suddenly they're inside of private …” “… end-to-end encrypted. And they said, is this a good thing or a bad thing? And I said, well, one of the reasons that I think Facebook is doing this is because if they encrypt messages, then they don't actually know what's being sent between people. And they're not liable if they can't look. And I suspected that a lot of that had to do with trying to avoid liability. We heard the Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, said that Facebook will become a privacy-focused social network. Does that make sense to you? How do you interpret that? Well, the issue is that they're trying to avoid liability. I'm sure there's many things that there are good reasons for doing what they're doing. But when they move all this, you know, the Russian hacking, the pedophilia stuff, all this stuff that's going on in these different groups, when suddenly they're inside of private groups, it's not their responsibility. Wow, I never thought of it like that. So once it's encrypted, they don't have to be responsible for telling the FBI or whatever, we knew this was happening, because they can't know. And then this actually did come out in some of the documents as part of this discovery process. Can you talk about this, Aza? …” View more
Ridealong summary
Meta's internal documents reveal a shocking strategy to avoid liability for child safety issues by encrypting messages, effectively shielding the company from responsibility. Testimonies in the New Mexico trial expose how executives acknowledged the dangers but chose to prioritize profit over children's safety. This trial could mark a pivotal moment in holding social media accountable for their actions.
Your Undivided Attention · Why the Meta Verdicts Are a Big Deal (And What It Was Like to Testify) · Mar 26, 2026
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
“… for him. And it might have stopped him doing it again. It might not. But it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. What I think has to happen, Mark Carney's Davos speech, the principles in that speech are what should be applied now. Because there's barely a leader in the world, apart from Donald Trump, who thinks anything other than what he's done in the last month is a catastrophe. No question. economically, geostrategically, politically, the law. Well, I think Vladimir Putin would disagree. We can come on. I think he's quite excited about what Donald Trump has done. We could come on to …” “… that have been a moment? Well, it would. And by the way, I think it would have enhanced Starmer's reputation and actually done him a world of good politically. Not only would it have been morally right, but it would have actually been politically advantageous for him. And it might have stopped him doing it again. It might not. But it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. What I think has to happen, Mark Carney's Davos speech, the principles in that speech are what should be applied now. Because there's barely a leader in the world, apart from Donald Trump, who thinks anything other than what he's done in the last month is a catastrophe. No question. economically, geostrategically, politically, the law. Well, I think Vladimir Putin would disagree. We can come on. I think he's quite excited about what Donald Trump has done. We could come on to him. I should have inserted the words democratically elected. There we go. I get that. Right. But they're all having to deal with the fallout. Yes. From what is essentially a catastrophic misjudication. by a terrible president. Now, I'm not suggesting that Keir Starmer stands up and says this is a catastrophic misjudgment by a terrible president. …” View more
Ridealong summary
In this segment, the hosts humorously dissect the absurdity of Donald Trump's diplomatic style, comparing him to an 'impulsive man baby' wielding military power. The discussion takes a sharp turn when they ponder how Keir Starmer could have called Trump out during a press event, leading to a hilariously imagined confrontation that showcases the ridiculousness of political decorum.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart · America vs. The Rest with Alastair Campbell · Mar 25, 2026
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
“… And to me, that, you know, that is far. I take such heart in that after watching all these elite institutions crumble in front of Trump. It's remarkable. And it's the tough thing for me is that public opinion only begins to move when we have explicit, not very nuanced evidence to the contrary of what they're saying. And it does it really does make you wonder if they'll lie that clearly to us when we're presented with very clear evidence to the counter, what are they lying about when we don't have the counter evidence and when public opinion can't be swayed because we haven't seen it as …” “… encouraging and inspiring the way people are making their voices heard, the way they're doing it, even after they've been explicitly threatened. They're still out there tracking ICE agents. They're still out there recording them on their cell phones. And to me, that, you know, that is far. I take such heart in that after watching all these elite institutions crumble in front of Trump. It's remarkable. And it's the tough thing for me is that public opinion only begins to move when we have explicit, not very nuanced evidence to the contrary of what they're saying. And it does it really does make you wonder if they'll lie that clearly to us when we're presented with very clear evidence to the counter, what are they lying about when we don't have the counter evidence and when public opinion can't be swayed because we haven't seen it as explicitly? And that's that's the tough part, Joseph, you know, as we wrap up, I think what Radley said is exactly right in terms of how we can be heartened by the people in terms of the tech piece of it. The one thing that I think maybe could provide some optimism is, you know, what technology can create. Technology can you know, nothing can fight AI …” View more
Ridealong summary
Tech companies are now openly aligning with state power, transforming into ideological arms of the military-industrial complex. With charismatic leaders like Palmer Luckey and Alex Karp promoting a defense-first agenda, the tech landscape is shifting towards a more aggressive partnership with government. This partnership raises questions about accountability and the implications for society as ordinary people begin to resist through grassroots movements.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart · The ICE Age of Surveillance and Enforcement · Jan 28, 2026
There Are No Girls on the Internet
“… big tech, pro Facebook. I think that if Facebook wanted to make safer products, they would shut down. They would stop existing. I am no friend to Mark Zuckerberg. However, I am very cautious about some of the precedent that I think this is setting. Facebook hurts people. They hurt kids. They profit from harming people. That is not in dispute. That is a fact. And I think that anybody who has been harmed by them should get paid for it because that harm is real and should have a monetary cost because Facebook certainly made a monetary profit from that harm and trafficking in that harm However I believe …” “… challenging and protecting themselves and their ability to design products however they want more and more uh it's a little bit of a digression, but I just wanted to get that in there too. Yes. So I don't think anybody listening thinks that I am pro big tech, pro Facebook. I think that if Facebook wanted to make safer products, they would shut down. They would stop existing. I am no friend to Mark Zuckerberg. However, I am very cautious about some of the precedent that I think this is setting. Facebook hurts people. They hurt kids. They profit from harming people. That is not in dispute. That is a fact. And I think that anybody who has been harmed by them should get paid for it because that harm is real and should have a monetary cost because Facebook certainly made a monetary profit from that harm and trafficking in that harm However I believe that a lot of these cases are so easily turned into more fodder for the way that elected officials are really chomping at the bit to age gate and restrict an open free internet. I do not think that Facebook and big tech companies should be allowed to get away with harm without any kind of accountability. Absolutely not.” View more
Ridealong summary
Meta and Google intentionally designed their platforms to be addictive, similar to tactics used by casinos, and hid evidence of harm from the public.
Social media companies like Meta intentionally designed their platforms to be addictive, similar to tactics used by casinos, and hid the resulting harm from the public.
There Are No Girls on the Internet · Erika Kirk Druski Parody; Chappell Roan's Bot Army; Meta Loses in Court; & OpenAI Kills Sora – News Roundup · Mar 28, 2026
The Joe Rogan Experience
Ridealong summary
In this hilarious segment, Mark Normand compares America's lagging infrastructure projects to Japan's speedy trains, questioning how a country can take decades to finish a bullet train. The absurdity peaks when they discuss the strange phenomenon of 'virgin influencers,' leading to a wild conclusion about trust and work ethic that will leave you in stitches.
The Joe Rogan Experience · #2471 - Mark Normand · Mar 20, 2026
Terms of Service with Clare Duffy
“… research that proved it. And so that for me was the highlight is seeing the internal documents that said just that, and then also hearing Mark Zuckerberg and Adam Masseri, head of Instagram try to talk their way around that and try to explain away decisions that they knew were going to harm children and move forward anyways. And so they couldn't argue against what we could actually see with our own eyes. One of the moments that stands out to me was Mark Zuckerberg getting asked about this internal study that Meta did, where they asked 18 independent experts about the impact of beauty filters on …” “… 10 out of 12 people on the jury didn buy those arguments I don think that they could argue that they didn build their platforms to be addictive because the documents were very clear that that's what they were doing, and then hiding it from us and discontinuing research that proved it. And so that for me was the highlight is seeing the internal documents that said just that, and then also hearing Mark Zuckerberg and Adam Masseri, head of Instagram try to talk their way around that and try to explain away decisions that they knew were going to harm children and move forward anyways. And so they couldn't argue against what we could actually see with our own eyes. One of the moments that stands out to me was Mark Zuckerberg getting asked about this internal study that Meta did, where they asked 18 independent experts about the impact of beauty filters on young people. And all of those experts said, this has the potential to cause serious harm. And yet Meta allows those filters on Instagram anyways. And Zuckerberg tried to say, well, it's a free speech issue. And we think that people shouldn't be restricted from accessing these things. But just so interesting the way that they've had internal …” View more
Ridealong summary
Meta and YouTube knowingly built addictive platforms and ignored internal research showing harm to children, prioritizing growth over safety.
Meta and YouTube knowingly built addictive platforms and ignored internal research showing harm to children, prioritizing growth over safety.
Terms of Service with Clare Duffy · How a Landmark Verdict Could Reshape Social Media · Mar 31, 2026
The Kim Komando Show
“… about the 5% billionaire tax. No, me either. I'm just, I'm gonna be okay. I don't have to worry about the millionaire tax or the 100,000 air tax. So Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan, they are scooping up a brand new mansion in Indian Creek. That's the gated community outside Miami that collects billionaires like Pokemon cards. All right. Jeff Bezos lives there. Tom Brady used to live there. It's basically a community where your HOA fees cost more than our homes. Sure. Okay. The price tag for the Zuckerberg's house is close to $200 million. Oh, so they got a small one. Yes. The seller is Peter Cancro. …” “… some really great phone calls you're gonna love. Okay, so here's one of the things that I never have to worry about in my life. Just, I don't have to worry about it. I mean, you know, I have a second home in California, but I don't have to worry about the 5% billionaire tax. No, me either. I'm just, I'm gonna be okay. I don't have to worry about the millionaire tax or the 100,000 air tax. So Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan, they are scooping up a brand new mansion in Indian Creek. That's the gated community outside Miami that collects billionaires like Pokemon cards. All right. Jeff Bezos lives there. Tom Brady used to live there. It's basically a community where your HOA fees cost more than our homes. Sure. Okay. The price tag for the Zuckerberg's house is close to $200 million. Oh, so they got a small one. Yes. The seller is Peter Cancro. Peter Cancro, you know who that is? No. He's the founder of Jersey Mike's. Oh, he's moving? Yes. So technically, Zuck is buying his house from a sandwich guy. He really is. There's gonna be vinegar and salt and pepper all over the whole place. Zuck found a metaverse that he finally can control. And he has legs. Yes. It's just outside of Miami. And on …” View more
Ridealong summary
A shocking discovery revealed that a man found a porn video of himself online, filmed during a hotel stay, due to hidden spy cameras activated by hotel key cards. Investigators uncovered Telegram channels with thousands of members paying for access to these illicit streams, raising serious concerns about privacy and consent in hotels. This alarming trend highlights the need for greater awareness and protection against such invasions of privacy.
The Kim Komando Show · How the FBI found Nancy Guthrie’s Nest Doorbell video · Feb 14, 2026
What Now? with Trevor Noah
“… understand how this then casts Facebook in a bad light. You know, this is just a social media company. What is it that Facebook did? What is it that Mark Zuckerberg said or did that made you go, Facebook is part of the actual problem that we're not the cause of everything in the world, but Facebook is contributing to these problems? Facebook has become a central piece of the machinery for how you convince the world of things. It's the battleground of ideas played out across Instagram and WhatsApp. and facebook connects billions of people it connected the world and all of the central problems of our time …” “had shaped you in many ways. But I don't understand how this then casts Facebook in a bad light. You know, this is just a social media company. What is it that Facebook did? What is it that Mark Zuckerberg said or did that made you go, Facebook is part of the actual problem that we're not the cause of everything in the world, but Facebook is contributing to these problems? Facebook has become a central piece of the machinery for how you convince the world of things. It's the battleground of ideas played out across Instagram and WhatsApp. and facebook connects billions of people it connected the world and all of the central problems of our time are playing out in those communities and so facebook absolutely has a role in how it prioritizes and it thinks about the architectures that might dramatically shape and shift how the entire world acts on any number of problems and of course the company absolutely would point to all the things that it thought might be positive stories for the company …” View more
Ridealong summary
Facebook has become a central player in the global disinformation crisis, shaping how ideas are communicated and communities interact. In a discussion with tech strategist Dex Hunter-Torricke, he highlights how the platform's architecture has contributed to societal divisions, despite its potential for positive impact. The responsibility of connecting the world comes with obligations that Facebook has often neglected.
What Now? with Trevor Noah · Dex Hunter-Torricke: Translating the Titans of Tech · Apr 09, 2026
The Joe Rogan Experience
“… just want everyone to leave? Well, they drove the billionaires out, right? Yeah. I mean, I know they drove out David Sachs, came to Austin. I think Mark Zuckerberg moved to Florida. I heard rumors of Steven Spielberg. I don't know if that's – I don't want to spread disinformation. I don't want to spread misinformation, but I heard he was leaving. But yeah, it's called the – The thing that drives me the most nuts is when these progressive talking heads saying they don't want to pay their fair share. with the amount of waste and fraud why would you you don't think there should be some accountability to how …” “… lost seats, right? Well, because California's done such a fucking terrible job of governing their state. It's so – that place is so crazy. Like every time there's some new law that they're trying to push through, some new bill. I'm like, do they just want everyone to leave? Well, they drove the billionaires out, right? Yeah. I mean, I know they drove out David Sachs, came to Austin. I think Mark Zuckerberg moved to Florida. I heard rumors of Steven Spielberg. I don't know if that's – I don't want to spread disinformation. I don't want to spread misinformation, but I heard he was leaving. But yeah, it's called the – The thing that drives me the most nuts is when these progressive talking heads saying they don't want to pay their fair share. with the amount of waste and fraud why would you you don't think there should be some accountability to how much fucking waste and fraud that has been clearly demonstrated like you the the solutions just give more money oh and they can do it because they have it so what you just give more money and now it's 30 billion dollars goes to homeless with no accountability like what are you what are you saying like where do you think this money is going to go …” View more
Ridealong summary
In a hilarious rant, the host questions California's governance, joking about how the state seems to be driving billionaires away. With quips about new laws pushing people out and the absurdity of high gas prices, the segment captures the frustration and humor in the chaos of political decisions.
The Joe Rogan Experience · #2465 - Michael Shellenberger · Mar 10, 2026
TBPN
“Yeah, I don't know. I'm so interested to know what Mark Zuckerberg is prompting. Hope's Revenge says ZStack. Yeah, it is ZStack. Honestly, ZStack is like, it's like God mode. I mean, it does make sense in his position to have a model that's fine-tuned on the internal KPIs, the internal org chart, all this information that's private. And he probably doesn't want to hand that off to another lab that's just going to maybe look at the data and be like, oh, okay. So Mark Zuckerberg just asked, how do I poach from …” “Yeah, I don't know. I'm so interested to know what Mark Zuckerberg is prompting. Hope's Revenge says ZStack. Yeah, it is ZStack. Honestly, ZStack is like, it's like God mode. I mean, it does make sense in his position to have a model that's fine-tuned on the internal KPIs, the internal org chart, all this information that's private. And he probably doesn't want to hand that off to another lab that's just going to maybe look at the data and be like, oh, okay. So Mark Zuckerberg just asked, how do I poach from all the other labs? But there's got to be so many other questions that he's asking all the time. When you're walking into a meeting with executives, you want to know, well, how is this division performing? How much money am I spending on meta-ray-band displays? What's the turn rate? Who are our biggest partners? There's a million questions. Yeah, …” View more
Ridealong summary
Mark Zuckerberg is developing a powerful AI agent, ZStack, designed to streamline how he accesses critical company information. This initiative reflects a broader goal at Meta to enhance efficiency and compete with smaller, agile AI startups. By eliminating bureaucratic layers, Zuckerberg aims to redefine employee roles and accelerate decision-making within the 78,000-person organization.
TBPN · SpaceX’s Lunar Mass Driver, OpenAI Hires Meta’s Top Ad Exec, Zuck Builds CEO Agent | Diet TBPN · Mar 23, 2026
Morning Brew Daily
“… be in maintenance mode with limited support. In other words, it'll be a zombie. Meta had high hopes for the metaverse, to say the least. After all, Mark Zuckerberg even changed the company's name in 2021 from Facebook to Meta to reflect what he called technology's next frontier. Speaking that October, Zuckerberg predicted our hope is that within the next decade, the metaverse will reach a billion people, host hundreds of billions of dollars of digital commerce, and support jobs for millions of creators and developers. It has done none of that. In fact, maybe the only thing it's been good at is setting …” “… be shutting down its VR social network, Horizon Worlds, for Quest VR headsets in June. Andrew Bosworth, Meta's CTO, yesterday clarified that Horizon Worlds will actually remain on VR after hearing feedback from fans or fan, but it will essentially be in maintenance mode with limited support. In other words, it'll be a zombie. Meta had high hopes for the metaverse, to say the least. After all, Mark Zuckerberg even changed the company's name in 2021 from Facebook to Meta to reflect what he called technology's next frontier. Speaking that October, Zuckerberg predicted our hope is that within the next decade, the metaverse will reach a billion people, host hundreds of billions of dollars of digital commerce, and support jobs for millions of creators and developers. It has done none of that. In fact, maybe the only thing it's been good at is setting money on fire. In total, Meta's poured $73 billion into Reality Labs, its virtual reality division that has never turned a profit and cost Meta billions of dollars in losses every single quarter. To lose maybe a little less money, earlier this year, Meta cut more than 1,000 employees from its VR unit. Toby Zuckerberg's vision of the Metaverse was …” View more
Ridealong summary
Meta's ambitious metaverse project, once predicted to be a multi-trillion dollar platform, is now a 'zombie' in maintenance mode after failing to attract users. Despite pouring $73 billion into its VR division, Meta's Horizon Worlds has struggled to find an audience, leading to significant layoffs and a pivot towards more successful products like AI-enabled Ray-Ban glasses. This shift highlights the growing disconnect between consumer interest and Meta's vision for virtual reality.
Morning Brew Daily · English-Speaking Nations Are Sadder Than Ever & USPS is Running Out of Cash · Mar 20, 2026
TBPN
Ridealong summary
Mark Cuban reveals that the most underrated business he encountered was streaming, which he pioneered in 1995 with Audionet. After realizing the potential of internet broadcasting, he secured the valuable domain broadcast.com for just $8,000, turning it into a traffic-generating powerhouse. This foresight led to a revolution in how we consume media today.
TBPN · FULL INTERVIEW: Mark Cuban on Robots, AI, Self-Driving, and Advice to Students · Mar 19, 2026
TBPN
Ridealong summary
Mark Zuckerberg's acquisition of Manus is a game-changer, as it positions Meta to compete head-to-head with giants like OpenAI and Microsoft. The deal isn't just about talent; it's about harnessing a revolutionary product that excels in areas where others have failed. With Manus's unique capabilities, Zuck may have just unlocked a new frontier in productivity tools.
TBPN · AI Side Quests, Zaslav's Payday, SF Housing Market is Back | Shyam Sankar, Gili Raanan, Anna Patterson, Jake Loosararian, carried_no_interest · Mar 17, 2026
TBPN
“… that they have to give you the honorary degree before while you still eligible That's a good one. Because they're like, oh, well, we got it. I think Mark Zuckerberg got an honorary degree from Harvard, but he was on delay for like a year. And I think they gave him the honorary degree a couple of years later. So, you know, that's the speed run to beat. But the point about the MacBook Neo is that at $599, a lot of PC makers should be sort of quaking in their boots because you're selling at that price point. And for a customer who's just like, I want a $600 laptop, normally it was like, am I going with like …” “… because you're on lead. That's great. There you go. There are some legendary leave of absences where people have been away for like 10 years and then they go and do so many See the goal is to defer for so long but then also have such a meteoric rise that they have to give you the honorary degree before while you still eligible That's a good one. Because they're like, oh, well, we got it. I think Mark Zuckerberg got an honorary degree from Harvard, but he was on delay for like a year. And I think they gave him the honorary degree a couple of years later. So, you know, that's the speed run to beat. But the point about the MacBook Neo is that at $599, a lot of PC makers should be sort of quaking in their boots because you're selling at that price point. And for a customer who's just like, I want a $600 laptop, normally it was like, am I going with like Asus or another brand? I'm not in the Apple category. category. Like it's not an option because that store over there, those laptops start over a thousand. That's not my budget. So I'm not even going in that store. Well, now you can, and you can spend $600 and get a pretty good computer. And the CFO, Nick Wu of Asus was on their recent earnings …” View more
Ridealong summary
Apple's new MacBook Neo, priced at $599, is poised to shake up the laptop market, especially for budget-conscious consumers who previously avoided Apple due to high prices. With its focus on content consumption, the device challenges traditional PC makers like Asus, who downplay its impact despite acknowledging its potential to attract new buyers. This shift reflects changing user needs, as many seek affordable devices for everyday use rather than high-powered machines.
TBPN · AI vs. Dog Cancer, Oscars Reactions, How to Lose the AI Arms Race | Kevin Espiritu, Paul Conyngham, Tony Zhao, Drew Oetting, Carina Hong, Cameron Fink, Debra Birnbaum · Mar 16, 2026
Adam Carolla Show
“… with Murnovich or was he after you? No, with Todd, yeah. Oh, wow. So it was Rodney Peet, then Todd. Oh, wow. That was a great era for us. You had Mark Carrier. Yeah. Yeah, Mark, everybody. Gordon? Yeah. Some great players. Yeah. Yeah. But I was a light tight end, so I was scout offense, the guys that get run over by the first string defense five days a week. And the first year, I redshirted, and I was a good high school player, but junior came up, and it was just, I found acting, because he just ran me over. Junior staff. Five days a week. There was no contest. Blow me off the ball 10 yards …” “… you went through it. I did. That wasn't even any good. What was your last year, Patrick, if you know what I'm asking? What year you finished in college? My last playing year, we lost to Michigan in the, I think it was the 89 Rose Bowl. Did you play with Murnovich or was he after you? No, with Todd, yeah. Oh, wow. So it was Rodney Peet, then Todd. Oh, wow. That was a great era for us. You had Mark Carrier. Yeah. Yeah, Mark, everybody. Gordon? Yeah. Some great players. Yeah. Yeah. But I was a light tight end, so I was scout offense, the guys that get run over by the first string defense five days a week. And the first year, I redshirted, and I was a good high school player, but junior came up, and it was just, I found acting, because he just ran me over. Junior staff. Five days a week. There was no contest. Blow me off the ball 10 yards back and pile drive the stage. Yeah, I think I'm going to find acting. The most depressing, well, first you found a mirror, and then you decide to find acting. That's why I found a mirror, and I found carpet cleaning. I found a tanning salon. Were you and Mark Harmon ever on the same field at the same time, or is he older than you? No, he's older. …” View more
Ridealong summary
Patrick Muldoon hilariously reflects on his transition from being a high school football star to cleaning carpets and feeling depressed. His candid admission about crying over football on TV and the absurdity of realizing he’s gone from a top player to getting steamrolled in college sports is both relatable and funny.
Adam Carolla Show · Patrick Muldoon (Carolla Classics) · Apr 24, 2026
Kim Komando Daily Tech Update
“Facebook's founder and Instagram CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, has been in court, on the hot seat all week. The outcome of this trial could literally change social media. The central question, was Facebook and Instagram intentionally designed to be addictive to children and teens and causing mental health harm to tens of millions? This case is called KGM versus Meta. It also involves YouTube. Instagram is especially in the crosshairs. A 20-year-old woman and her mother in a lawsuit claim the young woman …” “Facebook's founder and Instagram CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, has been in court, on the hot seat all week. The outcome of this trial could literally change social media. The central question, was Facebook and Instagram intentionally designed to be addictive to children and teens and causing mental health harm to tens of millions? This case is called KGM versus Meta. It also involves YouTube. Instagram is especially in the crosshairs. A 20-year-old woman and her mother in a lawsuit claim the young woman experienced severe depression, anxiety, and body image issues because of her uncontrollable use and addictive nature of Instagram. That it was purposely designed that way. The most damning evidence in the case? Zuckerberg keeps his own children off of all social media. To me, that says everything. Get my free newsletter at KKIM.com. And now, a clip …” View more
Ridealong summary
Mark Zuckerberg's ambitious metaverse project has officially failed, with $80 billion wasted and plans to shut it down. This comes on the heels of a court case questioning whether Instagram and Facebook are designed to be addictive, particularly to children, raising serious concerns about their impact on mental health. The stark reality? Zuckerberg keeps his own kids off social media, a telling indication of his own doubts about its safety.
Kim Komando Daily Tech Update · Zuckerberg on Trial · Feb 20, 2026
Tech Brew Ride Home
“Zuckerberg said that many Meta employees disagree with the company's decisions, which is something the company encourages. And while he understood Stewart's perspective, there was ultimately not enough causal evidence to support the assertions of harms by the outside experts. When Lanier asked if Zuckerberg had a college degree that would indicate expertise and causation, the Meta chief said, I don't have a college degree in anything. I agree, I do not …” “Zuckerberg said that many Meta employees disagree with the company's decisions, which is something the company encourages. And while he understood Stewart's perspective, there was ultimately not enough causal evidence to support the assertions of harms by the outside experts. When Lanier asked if Zuckerberg had a college degree that would indicate expertise and causation, the Meta chief said, I don't have a college degree in anything. I agree, I do not know the legal understanding of causation, but I think I have a pretty good idea of how statistics work, Zuckerberg said. The trial, which began in late January, centers on a young woman who alleged that she became addicted to social media and video streaming apps like Instagram and YouTube. The Facebook founder pushed back against the notion that …” View more
Ridealong summary
During a recent trial, Mark Zuckerberg defended Meta against claims that the company prioritizes user engagement over safety, arguing that increasing time on platforms like Instagram is not a goal. The trial centers on a young woman claiming social media addiction, while Zuckerberg insists that Meta's internal metrics are merely aspirations, not objectives. This raises questions about age verification and user safety on platforms frequented by children.
Tech Brew Ride Home · A Canticle For Leibowitz · Feb 19, 2026
Tech Brew Ride Home
“… AI model to at least May over performance concerns and also discussed temporarily licensing Gemini to power its products in the meantime. Quote, Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, said in July that his company's new artificial intelligence models would push the frontier in the next year or so. Now Mr. Zuckerberg, who has invested billions in the AI race, appears increasingly unlikely to hit that deadline, three people with knowledge of the matter said. Meta's new foundational AI model, which the company has been working on for months, has fallen short of the performance of leading AI models …” “Sources tell The Times that Meta has delayed the launch of its big Avocado AI model to at least May over performance concerns and also discussed temporarily licensing Gemini to power its products in the meantime. Quote, Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Meta, said in July that his company's new artificial intelligence models would push the frontier in the next year or so. Now Mr. Zuckerberg, who has invested billions in the AI race, appears increasingly unlikely to hit that deadline, three people with knowledge of the matter said. Meta's new foundational AI model, which the company has been working on for months, has fallen short of the performance of leading AI models from rivals like Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic on internal tests for reasoning, coding, and writing, said the people who were not authorized to speak publicly about confidential matters. The model, codenamed Avocado, outperformed Meta's previous AI model and did better than Google's Gemini 2.5 model from March, two of the people said, but it has …” View more
Ridealong summary
Meta's AI ambitions are faltering as their new Avocado model underperforms, forcing them to consider licensing rivals' technology.
Tech Brew Ride Home · Is Avocado… Toast? · Mar 13, 2026
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart
“… this is. So Elon, they recognize that these are powerful tools. So we're going to walk back a little bit just to get to kind of the genesis of this. Mark Zuckerberg does his Zuckerbucks, spends $400 million ostensibly to beef up resources. This is during COVID. So maybe they're putting up plexiglass on things. They're getting people more access. But he has the misfortune of spending $400 million on an election Donald Trump lost. Right. Right. So that also becomes part of the narrative. So I'm just trying to walk through so that the culture is maybe you consider it liberal. Zuckerberg spends all this money. …” “… people from seeing that if they were part of a protected group. But also in part of in the culture when much more people were on the ramparts about the usage of certain words or various things. I'm just trying to get at like the psychology of where this is. So Elon, they recognize that these are powerful tools. So we're going to walk back a little bit just to get to kind of the genesis of this. Mark Zuckerberg does his Zuckerbucks, spends $400 million ostensibly to beef up resources. This is during COVID. So maybe they're putting up plexiglass on things. They're getting people more access. But he has the misfortune of spending $400 million on an election Donald Trump lost. Right. Right. So that also becomes part of the narrative. So I'm just trying to walk through so that the culture is maybe you consider it liberal. Zuckerberg spends all this money. He doesn't do it ideologically.” View more
Ridealong summary
In this segment, the hosts hilariously dissect Mark Zuckerberg's $400 million investment during the election that Trump lost, highlighting the irony of spending so much on a losing cause. The discussion takes a comedic turn as they explore the liberal slant of social media culture and the absurdity of trying to 'beef up' an election that was already decided.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart · The Real Election Threat with Casey Newton and Renée DiResta · Mar 18, 2026
Mac OS Ken
“… in the States, Apple Intelligence very briefly and prematurely launched in the Middle Kingdom and is now gone. Over on the Heil site, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said midday Monday, Apple Intelligence launched in China in error. It's been ready to go for months, but Apple doesn't yet have regulatory approval. There's no imminent launch, and this isn't tied to the iOS 26.5 beta. Apple has pulled it offline. There's real support for German's been-ready-to-go-for-month assertion. The Apple Insider piece says posts online that caught the premature debut display the Settings app menu for Apple …” “… Apple Intelligence in China. That was followed by bigger news. Apple made a mistake launching Apple Intelligence in China and pulled it down as soon as they could. According to a piece from Apple Insider, nearly a year and a half after being introduced in the States, Apple Intelligence very briefly and prematurely launched in the Middle Kingdom and is now gone. Over on the Heil site, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said midday Monday, Apple Intelligence launched in China in error. It's been ready to go for months, but Apple doesn't yet have regulatory approval. There's no imminent launch, and this isn't tied to the iOS 26.5 beta. Apple has pulled it offline. There's real support for German's been-ready-to-go-for-month assertion. The Apple Insider piece says posts online that caught the premature debut display the Settings app menu for Apple Intelligence and Siri, showing the same layout and general labels as in English-speaking countries. So good to go, lit to pop, except for that pesky permission thing. Details, baby, details. Assuming that adding ads to Apple Maps was the biggest announcement in Apple's introduction last week of Apple Business, the biggest feature spotted in the blank OS …” View more
Ridealong summary
Apple's attempt to launch Apple Intelligence in China backfired spectacularly, as it was pulled almost immediately due to missing regulatory approval. This premature rollout coincided with the release of developer betas for iOS and macOS 26.5, showcasing Apple's ongoing innovation despite the hiccup. The blunder highlights the complexities of navigating international regulations in tech.
Mac OS Ken · Testing Begins on blankOS 26.5 - MOSK: 03.31.2026 · Mar 31, 2026

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Best Podcasts on OpenAI's OpenClaw Hiring
OpenAI has hired Peter Steinberger, the creator of the viral open-source agent framework OpenClaw (formerly Moltbot), to lead its 'personal agents' division. Announced on February 15, this move signals a major strategic pivot for OpenAI toward 'agentic AI'—systems capable of executing complex tasks autonomously rather than just generating text. As part of the transition, OpenClaw will move to a foundation structure to remain open-source, though Steinberger will work directly on OpenAI's proprietary agent architecture.
Feb 16, 2026 · 12 clips · 7 podcasts