Editor Brian Harrod Provides Comprehensive up-to-date news coverage, with aggregated news from sources all over the world from the Roundup Newswires Network
Americans on both sides of the Trump divide must be asking, is the President really gonna keep up the tweet storm? Remember when Donald Trump's aides confiscated his Twitter account? It was a bright, beautiful time-if all too brief. Trump went silent on his personal social media profile as his team grappled with his surprise success on Election Day, a race that he was widely expected to lose.
'So, I heard you went to Hamilton, Mike': Alec Baldwin portrays a clueless President Trump who bullies Pence, asks SIRI about ISIS and holds awkward meeting with Romney in mocking SNL skit 'Couldn't even memorize lines!' Trump continues feud with Hamilton cast with ANOTHER tweet AFTER a full day of Cabinet meetings - only to delete it moments later Trump's digital director claims Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey personally censored his campaign by backing out of 'Crooked Hillary' customized emojis despite $5million deal Mystery as UFO hunter posts images of huge spherical object in front of the Sun that was captured by NASA cameras Kanye West rips into Beyonce, Hillary Clinton AND Mark Zuckerberg in ANOTHER on-stage rant before ending concert after just 10 MINUTES I love you Leonardo ...why have you cut me dead? DiCaprio's brother reveals bitter feud with Hollywood star after their wild partying ... (more)
Former PacketSled CEO Matt Harrigan is blaming being drunk for posting a death threat against President-elect Donald Trump on Election Day last week. Harriman has apologized for the post, and has temporarily moved his family.
President-Elect Donald Trump on Wednesday personally denied press reports of troubles inside the work of his transition team, going on Twitter to highlight his discussions with world leaders. "It is going smoothly," Mr. Trump said in a flurry of tweets, where he took aim primarily at the New York Times.
Alphabet Inc's Google and Facebook Inc on Monday announced measures aimed at halting the spread of "fake news" on the internet by targeting how some purveyors of phony content make money: advertising. Google said it is working on a policy change to prevent websites that misrepresent content from using its AdSense advertising network, while Facebook updated its advertising policies to spell out that its ban on deceptive and misleading content applies to fake news.
President-elect Donald Trump took to Twitter on Sunday morning to blast one of the country's biggest news outlets - the New York Times . Trump sent out three tweets within about an hour of each other separated by mentions of high-profile figures who called to congratulate him on winning election, such as both former president Bushes and Mitt Romney.
Advice from an ex-Capitol Hill staffer on how to get a Congress member's attention has gone viral in the aftermath of the close and divisive 2016 election. Emily Ellsworth, a writer and editor from Salt Lake City, worked for both Utah Reps.
Donald Trump credits social media with a key role in his upset victory in the U.S. presidential election and may continue to use it once he takes office, though he plans to be more circumspect. "I'm going to be very restrained, if I use it at all, I'm going to be very restrained," Trump said in an interview that will run in full on CBS's "60 Minutes" on Sunday.
Donald Trump says social media helped him win the presidential election -- but he'll be "restrained" about using Twitter and Facebook once in power. In an interview with CBS, set to air on Sunday, Trump also tells Lesley Stahl that social media gives him "a method of fighting back" against negative news coverage.
As protests of President-elect Donald Trump entered another day, police in Portland, Oregon, say one person was shot by a man who had gotten into a confrontation with a protester. Portland police said the person who was shot was taken to a hospital for treatment of injuries that were not life-threatening.
Our eNewspaper network was founded in 2002 to provide stand-alone digital news sites tailored for the most searched-for locations for news. With a traditional newspaper format, more than 100 sites were established each with a newspaper-type name to cover the highest-ranked regions, countries, cities and states.
Miami: Protesters demonstrating against the election of Donald Trump gathered in several U.S. cities for a third night on Friday, hours after the president-elect praised their "passion". Thousands took to the streets in Miami, Atlanta, Philadelphia, New York, San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, voicing anger at Trump's inflammatory and often deeply controversial campaign rhetoric about immigrants, Muslims and women.
This was the most-viewed U.S. election related live stream on Twitter, surpassing unique viewer totals for U.S. political convention and presidential debate live streams. The broadcast, which aired exclusively on Twitter as part of a partnership between Twitter and Buzzfeed, had an average minute audience of 165K viewers globally, peaking at 244K concurrent viewers.
As Barack Obama began preparing to leave office, the first smartphone-toting U.S. president ordered his team to upgrade the White House's aging technology for his successor.
I've noticed two distinct ways social media have changed the way we talk to each other about politics. Clearly, they have changed a lot, maybe everything, but two fairly new phenomena stand out.
For the 27th time, Wikileaks has released hacked emails from a top aide to Hillary Clinton, as Republicans have repeatedly seized on those internal missives to raise questions about actions of the Clinton Campaign. Will there be more in what's come out today? 1. Clinton campaign friends in high places.
Facebook reported its latest quarterly data on Wednesday. Revenue climbed, profits soared, user numbers jumped, so why on earth did its stock value suddenly tumble?\ Facebook reported its latest quarterly data.
That, however, hasn't stopped anti-Clinton Twitter users from trying to spread misinformation to Clinton supporters with well-crafted ads that look like they come straight from Hillary For America. Many of them appear to have been removed after Twitter user @mcnees highlighted the ads and Twitter's response to them in a few tweets of his own.
Only days before the presidential election, the FBI released a 17-year-old archive of documents from a long-closed investigation into Bill Clinton's presidential pardon of a fugitive financier, prompting questions from Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign about its timing. The 129 pages of heavily censored material were published Monday on the FBI's Freedom of Information Act webpage and noted by one of the bureau's Twitter accounts Tuesday.