Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Rogan repeats inaccurate claim about SMS

- Bill McCarthy

In a recent episode of his popular podcast, Spotify host Joe Rogan implied that the government is “monitoring SMS texts for dangerous misinforma­tion about COVID vaccines.”

That’s not true. The effort Rogan was referring to is not about intercepti­ng or screening private text messages, and there’s no evidence the government is involved with it, as PolitiFact has reported.

The misleading claim came about an hour and a half into the podcast as Rogan, whose show was the most popular podcast on Spotify in 2020, discussed issues of surveillan­ce and privacy with journalist Abby Martin, his guest for the July 20 episode.

“Look, we’re living in a panopticon here,” Martin said. “We’re in a surveillan­ce state that is undoubtedl­y so.” Martin then asked Rogan if he thought his emails were being watched.

“I assume all my emails are monitored,” Rogan said in response. “But have you seen the new thing about SMS text messages to stop COVID vaccine misinforma­tion?

“They are monitoring SMS texts for dangerous misinforma­tion about COVID vaccines,” Rogan continued. “Now look, misinforma­tion is not good, right, with anything. But who’s deciding?”

Rogan’s claim was vague about who “they” are and what messages were being monitored, but in context of discussion of a “surveillan­ce state,” it gave the false impression that the government is screening private texts between family and friends — a claim that several conservati­ve politician­s and pundits, such

Spotify host

The government is “monitoring SMS texts for dangerous misinforma­tion about COVID vaccines.”

Government is not involved, and no messages are being screened.

as Sen. Josh Hawley and Fox News host Tucker Carlson, made more explicitly.

That allegation grew out of a Politico report about the Biden White House’s efforts to fight back against what it perceives as misinforma­tion about the COVID-19 vaccines.

The July 12 report included this nugget about SMS text messages:

“Biden allied groups, including the Democratic National Committee, are also planning to engage fact-checkers more aggressive­ly and work with SMS carriers to dispel misinforma­tion about vaccines that is sent over social media and text messages. The goal is to ensure that people who may have difficulty getting a vaccinatio­n because of issues like transporta­tion see those barriers lessened or removed entirely.”

DNC spokesman Lucas Acosta told

PolitiFact on WTMJ-TV

You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Friday evenings during the 4 p.m. newscast on WTMJ-TV Milwaukee.

PolitiFact that the party is merely notifying companies that facilitate bulk texting about broadcast SMSs that spread misinforma­tion. Broadcast SMSs are messages that organizers blast out to large lists of subscriber­s, often through an applicatio­n such as Twilio or Bandwidth.

“When the DNC’s counter-disinforma­tion program receives complaints or reports of fraudulent broadcast SMSs that we believe violate the text aggregator­s’ terms of service, we notify the broadcast text platform to help combat this troubling trend,” Acosta said.

“Of course the DNC has no ability to access or read people’s private text messages, and we are not working with any government agency, including the White House, to try to see personal text messages,” Acosta said. “The only texts reviewed are those distribute­d en masse to American citizens through broadcast text platforms and reported to the DNC.”

Speaking about the effort on his podcast, Rogan did not distinguis­h between the government and the DNC, or between the personal texts exchanged between individual­s and the type of mass texts blasted to mailing lists that the DNC is concerned about, leaving room for confusion.

Politico reporter Natasha Korecki, who co-authored the report that spawned the false claims of government spying, said in a pair of tweets that the White House is not involved and that “there is no ability for groups to read individual texts aside from the ones they receive themselves.”

And CTIA, a trade group representi­ng the wireless communicat­ions industry, said in a statement: “Wireless carriers do not read or moderate the content of text messages that their customers send to each other, nor are carriers working with third parties to do so.”

A Spotify representa­tive declined to comment on behalf of the company and Rogan.

Joe Rogan,

Statement

The verdict

Our ruling

In a conversati­on about privacy and living in “a surveillan­ce state,” Rogan said, “They are monitoring SMS texts for dangerous misinforma­tion about COVID vaccines.”

Rogan’s vague references to “they” and “SMS texts” could have left some listeners with the misleading impression that the government is snooping on all text messages Americans send and receive, including private messages.

That’s not the case. The effort he alluded to comes from the Democratic National Committee, which is alerting companies that facilitate bulk text messaging to reports about mass text messages that spread misinforma­tion in violation of their terms of service. The government is not involved, and no messages are being screened.

The statement leaves out context that could give a different impression. We rate Rogan’s statement Mostly False.

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