Will Oremus

Washington, D.C.

Technology news analysis writer

Education: Stanford University, BA in Philosophy; Columbia Journalism School, MA in Political Journalism

Will Oremus writes about the ideas, products and power struggles shaping the digital world for The Washington Post. Before joining The Post in 2021, he spent eight years as Slate's senior technology writer and two years as a senior writer for OneZero at Medium.
Latest from Will Oremus

How TikTokers think about misinformation

As more Americans turn to the video app for politics, a researcher examines how they decide what to believe.

September 11, 2024
TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew leaves a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing in Washington in March 2023.

Telegram chief Durov condemns his arrest but promises to ‘improve’

Durov argued that if CEOs are held responsible for misuse of a platform, no one would ever innovate.

September 6, 2024
Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov, shown here in 2016, says that “claims in some media that Telegram is some sort of anarchic paradise are absolutely untrue. We take down millions of harmful posts and channels every day.”

California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk is overflowing with AI bills

The Washington Post’s essential guide to tech policy news.

September 5, 2024
California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) holds the power to sign or veto several pieces of AI-related legislation.

A telltale clue reveals shady ads on Facebook and Instagram

Links to Telegram on Meta’s platforms often lead to drugs and scams, researchers find.

September 4, 2024

Musk and Durov are facing the revenge of the regulators

For years, internet moguls like Elon Musk and Pavel Durov have flown above the law as captains of free speech. Now they’re hitting turbulence.

August 31, 2024
Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes suspended Elon Musk’s X after it defied a mandate to designate a legal representative in the country.

Telegram’s Pavel Durov built a haven for free speech — and child predators

Telegram’s anything-goes approach to online content has also made it one of the internet’s largest havens for child predators, experts say.

August 29, 2024

Zuckerberg expresses regrets over covid misinformation crackdown

Meta CEO criticizes government effort to police online misinformation on the pandemic, while saying he “owns” Facebook’s decisions on content moderation.

August 27, 2024
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifying at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in January.

AI researchers call for ‘personhood credentials’ as bots get smarter

Paper warns AI impersonators could “overwhelm the internet” without better ways to verify humans.

August 21, 2024
A man has his iris scanned by the Worldcoin orb, a biometric data-scanning device, in Buenos Aires on March 22.

Trump’s AI fakes of Harris and Swift aren’t meant to fool you

Trump isn’t using AI as a sophisticated weapon of deception, but as just another tool in his rhetorical arsenal. 

August 19, 2024
People attend a Donald Trump rally in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on Saturday.

AI’s legal reckoning is one step closer

A class-action lawsuit brought by a group of artists against firms Stability AI and Midjourney cleared a key legal hurdle.

August 14, 2024
Artist Karla Ortiz, shown with one of her paintings last year, is among the plaintiffs suing a group of AI start-ups.