The front page of a newspaper, magazine, or other publication often contains the major or most important news of the day. Typically, other stories will be teased on the front page, and the back pages may include more in-depth information or smaller pieces of less important news.
Generally, when someone says “the front-page story”, they are referring to something that is of great importance and worthy of being seen by a large audience. It may be a major breaking event, or it might be something that is causing controversy or debate. The term is often used in a political context as well.
In the case of Backpage, three Jane Does who were sex trafficked as minors sued the site in 2014 in federal court, accusing it of facilitating their sex crimes by posting ads for them and charging them for sex. The lawsuit alleged that in one instance, Backpage substantially changed the content of an ad connected to Jane Doe 3, and this violated CDA Section 230, which protects online publications from liability for third-party content.
Microsoft’s FrontPage was a WYSIWYG HTML editor and Web server administration tool first released in 1996 as part of the Windows NT 4.0 Server release. It was later included with the Office suite of software applications and renamed Microsoft FrontPage Server Extensions (FPSE). Up through FrontPage 98, it consisted of two programs: FrontPage Editor for designing pages and FrontPage Explorer for managing web site folders. Starting with FrontPage 2000, the two programs were merged into the Editor application. FrontPage 2003 added Intellisense, a form of autocompletion, which suggests tags and properties when editing in Code View, and the ability to create and reuse HTML code snippets.