Basketball Hall of Famer Michael Jordan arrives at the federal courthouse in Chicago, Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2015. (AP Photo/Christian K. Lee)
CHICAGO (AP) --
Closing arguments have been delayed a day in a federal civil trial to decide how much money a grocery-store chain owes former Chicago Bulls star Michael Jordan.
Court documents filed Thursday show closing arguments will begin Friday. The lawyers and judge are planning to meet Thursday, when they will go through jury instructions. Jurors will begin deliberating after closings are completed.
The trial stems from a lawsuit the six-time NBA champion brought against the now-defunct Dominick's Finer Foods for using his name in a 2009 steak ad.
Jordan, his agent and one of his marketing executives took the stand during testimony. They argued that each use of his name is worth at least $10 million. Dominick's says that's too high when it's only his name that is used.
Mark Zuckerberg talks about the Orion AR glasses during the Meta Connect conference on Sept. 25, 2024, in Menlo Park, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez, File)
Facebook and Instagram owner Meta said Tuesday it's scrapping its third-party fact-checking program and replacing it with Community Notes written by users similar to the model used by Elon Musk's social media platform X.
Starting in the U.S., Meta will end its fact-checking program with independent third parties. The company said it decided to end the program because expert fact checkers had their own biases and too much content ended up being fact checked.
Instead, it will pivot to a Community Notes model that uses crowdsourced fact-checking contributions from users.
"We've seen this approach work on X – where they empower their community to decide when posts are potentially misleading and need more context," Meta's Chief Global Affairs Officer Joel Kaplan said in a blog post.
Kaplan said the new system will be phased in over the next couple of months, and the company will work on improving it over the year. As part of the transition, Meta will use labels to replace warnings overlaid on posts that it forces users to click through.
The Associated Press had participated in Meta's fact-checking program previously but ended its participation a year ago.
The social media company also said it plans to allow "more speech" by lifting some restrictions on some topics that are part of mainstream discussion such as immigration and gender in order to focus on illegal and "high severity violations" like terrorism, child sexual exploitation and drugs.
Meta said that its approach of building complex systems to manage content on its platforms has "gone too far" and has made "too many mistakes" by censoring too much content.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg acknowledged that the changes are in part sparked by political events including... Read More