Mashable – Social Media Section

Written by Sam Sheffer

Do you use Snapchat? Do you like cereal? Do you live in London? If you said yes to all three of those things, youre in luck keep reading. Were excited to announce that weve partnered with Snaphappen the first (unofficial) Snapchat conference ...

Facebook is making its 360-degree videos more immersive and easier to navigate.

His legs were hacked off with a SWORD.

And twitter responded with outrage.

From live stunts to augmented reality and everything in between, 2016 has seen some of the marketing worlds most innovative work yet. In its fourth year, the Mashies, Mashables annual celebration of the agencies and brands that are creating the mos...

The results may make new moms reconsider why they use Facebook to post about their children.

The custom Twitter emoji will appear every time you use the hashtag #5H727.

We saw a wide variety of hobbies -- fitness activities, arts and crafts, studies -- as well as beautiful places and portraits of people who inspire you.

Kathy Chen's former history working for the Chinese military has sent waves across the Twittersphere.

"These are the only guns I want on campus."

Let everyone know you are a witness.

They are not the same person.

#PantsuitPosse takeover

It's in a new city, too.

"I have to deal with loads of stuff myself personally."

That river is not usually a river.

Just some technical difficulties...

Facebook posts and hashtags magnified opinions and somewhat pushed the needle when it came to the drug's cost.

Twitter has been buzzing about a possible hurricane in Florida for days, making it hard for the public to tell official information from online spin.

This was not a good time to make a PokStop.

"It's easy to lose sight of what's real."

"This is completely inappropriate and disgusting!"

It strikes some as rather draconian.

Look closer.

"Everything will change."

"Oh my god, I'm so scared"

YouTube musician Christina Grimmie died in June at a fan event in Florida.

Mildred and Richard Loving changed history, now a film documents their story.

"Nail it to end it."

Police use of captured cellphone data, social media monitoring tools, and facial recognition technology has already been called racially biased, and these technologies aren't likely to disappear from departments.

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Mashable - Social Media Section

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