Happy Tuesday! Here’s your Tuesday Tech Drop, the past week’s top stories from the intersection of technology and politics.
Meta Oversight Board’s AI warning
A review from Meta’s Oversight Board found the social media platform isn’t doing enough to combat the spread of artificial intelligence-generated deepfakes. The ruling from Meta’s Oversight Board reversed the company’s decision to leave up a deepfake video that purported to show buildings damaged in Israel amid the country’s 12-day conflict with Iran last year. In its decision, the board said Meta needs to do more to warn the public about deepfake content, saying Meta’s “approach to surfacing AI-generated content must evolve.”
It continues:
This includes providing details at scale about the origin of media, based on content provenance standards, investing in stronger detection tools and developing better methods for appropriate labeling. Meta needs to create a new, separate set of rules to ensure users can reliably recognize AI-generated content. Additionally, it should amend its current policies to ensure a timely and adequate response to deceptive AI-generated output. The company needs to meet its public commitments and employ its own tools and others available across the industry to effectively address deceptive generative AI content that spreads among platforms.
The revelation comes as Meta fights ongoing litigation alleging its platforms fuel mass harm, including to children.
Read the full ruling from Meta’s Oversight Board here.
Droning on
Donald Trump’s sons are investing in a new drone company in their latest effort to profit from the war economy, as their father’s administration inserts the U.S. into global conflicts.
Donald Trump Jr. joined the advisory board of drone maker Unusual Machines in November 2024, and his older brother, Eric Trump, is an investor in Israeli drone company Xtend.
Read more at The Wall Street Journal here.
Musk and xAI take an early loss
A judge last week denied Elon Musk’s AI company, xAI, a preliminary injunction seeking to block California’s AI transparency law from going into effect. The law requires AI companies to offer some transparency about the data being used to train their AI tools.
Read my blog on the ruling for MS NOW here.
States snub Live Nation settlement
Live Nation, the entertainment company that has faced antitrust scrutiny and public outrage over its ticket pricing, reached a settlement with the Trump administration that was announced Monday. As Ars Technica reported, the settlement appears to have blindsided several states that had raised concerns about Live Nation — many of which are refusing to sign agreements to the settlement’s terms.
Read more at Ars Technica here.
Trump dogged by data center backlash
Donald Trump’s Big Tech photo op last week, centered on growing concerns about energy costs linked to resource-reliant data centers, went big on bluster — and small on specifics.
Read my blog about it for MS NOW here.








