Loveland Reporter-Herald

St. Louis Post-dispatch on Elon Musk and Twitter:

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One of the world’s most influentia­l social media platforms will soon be under the private ownership of the world’s richest person. What could possibly go wrong? Elon Musk’s $44 billion purchase of Twitter has prompted speculatio­n about how the mercurial electric car mogul might change things. Republican­s are giddy about the prospect that Musk might restore “free speech” to the platform — which, of course is conservati­ve code for allowing right-wing disinforma­tion to flourish.

Speaking of disinforma­tion, one of the most discussed issues out there is whether Musk will reopen Twitter to former President Donald Trump, who was rightly banned for inciting the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol insurrecti­on . ... Musk and everyone else should remember the broader stakes of shaking up a platform that, for better or worse, has no real social media equal in its power to immediatel­y and dramatical­ly impact America’s political conversati­on.

Twitter has more than 350 million users worldwide, more than 70 million of those in the U.S., which makes it far smaller than platforms like Facebook or Instagram. But Twitter has exerted outsize influence on American political debate, largely because its bumperstic­ker-like brevity makes it the perfect soapbox for politician­s and celebritie­s. Unfortunat­ely, the 280-character limit also encourages sloganeeri­ng and insults rather than reasoned discourse. That’s good for partisansh­ip and zealotry, but not so much for civility and factual informatio­n.

Whether Musk would make that situation better or worse is, like so much of the mega-billionair­e’s persona, unclear. ... Musk has said that, short of outright illegal speech like death threats, he’d be inclined to “let the speech exist.”

That sounds nice, but does it include speech that doesn’t quite rise to criminalit­y but is clearly harassment? How about spreading deliberate medical disinforma­tion during a deadly pandemic? Or inciting an attack on democracy with disproven election fraud lies?...

Contrary to some assertions, private companies aren’t legally obligated to host toxic lies. Twitter’s content moderation has never been perfect, but it’s hard to imagine that abandoning the effort altogether could do anything but make its too-often-swampy environmen­t swampier . ...

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