Twitter Files: Employees Knew the Media's Favorite Russian Bots List Was Fake
"I think we need to just call this out on the bullshit it is."
"I think we need to just call this out on the bullshit it is."
The internal company documents offer a behind-the-scenes glimpse at how the federal agencies distorted the public debate on one of the world's largest social media platforms.
The tendency of those in power to topple or embarrass themselves by overreaching should provide a lesson to policy makers.
When I was young, I assumed government would lift people out of poverty. But those policies often do more harm than good.
Elon Musk reignited the GOP’s interest to bring charges against Anthony Fauci.
Plus: Sen. Mike Lee wants to remove First Amendment protections for porn, IRS doxxes taxpayers, and more...
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook at 1 p.m. Eastern for a live analysis of the internal Twitter documents recently published by Matt Taibbi, Bari Weiss, and Michael Shellenberger.
Plus: Elon Musk bans Twitter account that tracks his private jet, Iong permit waits to build new apartment buildings in San Francisco, and more...
The most disturbing aspect of the “Twitter Files” is the platform’s cozy relationship with federal officials who demanded suppression of speech they considered dangerous.
Plus: The editors briefly celebrate a noteworthy shake-up in the Senate.
Content moderators had "weekly confabs" with law enforcement officials, reports Matt Taibbi.
Instead of debating whether the platform has been flooded by bigotry, Elon Musk should tell the congressman to mind his own business.
Twitter employees have indicated that shadow banning—at least by some definitions—is both real and common.
The rise of remote work has piqued developers' interest in converting empty downtown offices to apartments. Zoning codes and building regulations often make that impossible.
A Democratic member of Congress laments how Twitter handled the New York Post's reporting on Hunter Biden's laptop.
Plus: The editors consider a listener question on the involuntary hospitalization of the mentally ill.
The Twitter Files are interesting but contain few true surprises. A mix of incompetence and partisanship got the site in trouble.
The "free speech absolutist" is maintaining some content restrictions while loosening others.
Plus: Freedom's Furies, SCOTUS to take up student loan forgiveness plan, and more...
It's a private company. Its owner can do what he chooses, even if it seems crazy.
Elon Musk's rescission of the platform's prior policy, which forbade dissent from official guidance, is consistent with his promise of lighter moderation.
Thousands of tech workers are being laid off. That’s putting H-1B visa holders on tight timelines to find new work.
EU officials threaten to make their restrictive content rules a global standard.
Plus: Twitter is alive and well, the U.K. considers unprecedented tax hikes, and more...
Thanks to the rise of private spaceflight companies, mankind will have a future off-Earth.
Privatization can free orbital innovation from ground-bound politics.
Plus: "you can't spoil what's already rotten," inflation stayed high in October, Election 2022 takeaways, and more...
If the bird site's new owner wants to protect free speech, he should focus on resisting government requests to remove content.
Plus: Congress remains too cautious about marijuana, myths about independent contractors, and more...
On Tuesday, the senator erroneously claimed that "free speech does not include spreading misinformation."
The House Speaker's husband was attacked by a crazy home intruder. Why is Donald Trump pretending otherwise?
Plus: Hate speech is free speech, tax gap is stable, and more...
Plus: For Halloween, the editors describe what scares them most about politics and government right now.
Plus: Charlottesville cracks down on city employee speech, judge dismisses "blackout challenge" lawsuit against TikTok, and more...
Plus: The editors consider Ye and social media, then field a question about the TARP bailouts during the 2008 fiscal crisis.
Plus: Musk's Twitter purchase may be back on, global deflation may be looming, and more...
Regular people are not so terminally online.
Plus: The editors engage in a full-throated denunciation of the CIA in response to a listener question.
Democrats pander to immigrants but do little to liberalize the system. Meanwhile, Republicans' hostility to immigrants has increased.
Corporate law profs disagree on the merits of Twitter's lawsuit to force Elon Musk to follow through with his offer to buy the company.
It would signal that the transportation future involves decentralization and rapid change rather than Washington-style command-and-control.
It seems like an ambiguous episode that was handled appropriately.
The Hereticon organizer on deplatforming, tribalism, and why tech dudes and journalists are natural enemies
Plus: The Pro-Choice Caucus thinks choice is a harmful word, trade restrictions worsened the baby formula shortage, and more...
Plus: A democratic socialist running for office is caught up in a MeToo witch hunt, inflation woes continue, and more...
Plus: Elon Musk's plans for Twitter, officials want to tax NFTs, and more...
If there is a headline, it should probably be: "Elon Musk Agrees With Twitter That Censoring the Hunter Biden Story Was Wrong."