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Recode Daily: Facebook built a censorship tool that could help it get back into China

The tool can block posts from appearing in News Feeds based on location.

At a 2015 gathering in Redmond, Wash., Mark Zuckerberg talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping as Lu Wei, China’s internet czar, looks on.
At a 2015 gathering in Redmond, Wash., Mark Zuckerberg talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping as Lu Wei, China’s internet czar, looks on.
At a 2015 gathering in Redmond, Wash., Mark Zuckerberg talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping as Lu Wei, China’s internet czar, looks on.
Ted S. Warren-Pool/Getty Images

Aiming to regain access to the huge China market, Facebook has built a tool that can prevent posts from appearing in people’s News Feeds in specific geographic areas. Mark Zuckerberg has defended the project, but several employees have quit after expressing misgivings. — [Mike Isaac / New York Times]

In a sit-down with New York Times staffers, Donald Trump was both critical and conciliatory, ultimately calling the paper “a world jewel.” Trump tempered some of his campaign rhetoric on climate change, waterboarding and jailing Hillary Clinton, while rejecting conflict-of-interest questions over his businesses. — [Michael D. Shear, Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Maggie Haberman / New York Times]

Ad tech platform AppNexus has barred right-wing publisher Breitbart News from using its ad-serving tools because the site violated its rules against hate speech. — [Mark Bergen / Bloomberg]

Twitter reminded developers that using its data for surveillance is prohibited. The company recently cut off access to two companies that were providing surveillance services to U.S. law enforcement. — [April Glaser and Kurt Wagner / Recode]

On the eve of Black Friday, pilots for an Ohio cargo airline that delivers packages for Amazon and DHL have gone on strike. Amazon said it would work with its other carriers to avoid delivery delays. — [Paul Page and Laura Stevens / Wall Street Journal]

On the latest episode of Recode Media with Peter Kafka, Ken Kurson, editor in chief of the Observer, talks about the scrutiny that comes with running a newspaper published by Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. — [Eric Johnson / Recode]

Top Stories From Recode

Malls are trying to use humanoid robots to get shoppers back from the internet

But SoftBank’s android isn’t very useful.

Black Friday isn’t dead. It’s just irrelevant.

We’re not buying it anymore.

A credit card hack at MSG gives Knicks fans another reason to despise owner Jim Dolan

First he let Jeremy Lin go. Now this.

SpaceX will launch a satellite for NASA to monitor climate change in 2021

The satellite will watch how Earth’s bodies of water change over time.

New Yorkers are lining up around the block and into the subway to buy Snap’s new Spectacles

It’s pretty cold out, too.

Apple got a patent for an iPhone that is meant to bend

Though there’s no telling when — or even if — such a phone would arrive.

This Is Cool

Physics says this space engine can’t work. NASA engineers say it can.

The latest on the controversial EmDrive.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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