Loveland Reporter-Herald

The Las Vegas Review-journal on when government hops in bed with social media platforms:

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There was a time, not too long ago, that media organizati­ons and civil liberties groups would have been aghast at a major technology company colluding with the government to suppress certain viewpoints. But the Twitter controvers­y highlights how far progressiv­e institutio­ns have drifted from their commitment to free speech.

Elon Musk’s drop of the Twitter files has received scant attention from left-leaning news outlets despite confirming that the company worked with government officials — in the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies — to “moderate” content. Not surprising­ly, most of that content was of a conservati­ve variety.

The most high-profile example of Twitter’s misguided “gate-keeping” was its all-out effort to suppress as “misinforma­tion” a New York Post account published weeks before the 2020 election detailing the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop. The paper’s report later proved to be accurate. Yet the company’s censorship efforts had willing cheerleade­rs in the government, something that may have influenced its actions.

It’s said that Twitter is a private company and that its executives therefore have the right to make internal policy on content regulation. This is true. But when government officials are helping to make decisions about censoring the accounts of disfavored users or those with controvers­ial viewpoints, there are constituti­onal questions in play.

“Because the government has the power to make life difficult for social media companies through castigatio­n, regulation, litigation and legislatio­n,” Jacob Sullum of Reason magazine wrote, “its ‘requests’ always carry an implicit threat.”

On Wednesday, former Twitter chief Jack Dorsey acknowledg­ed the company erred by over-managing the marketplac­e of ideas. “This burdened the company with too much power,” he told The Wall Street Journal, “and opened us to significan­t outside pressure.”

It’s true that both Democrats and Republican­s have made noise about cracking down on Big Tech over content objections. But if Mr. Musk’s document release shows anything, it’s that the hard left has an inordinate­ly large voice at these companies in determinin­g what is and isn’t acceptable — and, increasing­ly, any disagreeme­nt with leftist orthodoxy is seen by progressiv­e ideologues as “hate speech,” “misinforma­tion” or “lies.”

Suppressin­g the speech of respected medical profession­als who questioned heavy-handed COVID tactics had nothing to do with protecting rubes from dangerous “misinforma­tion” and everything to do with promoting a mindless progressiv­e conformity. Twitter has every right to operate in such a manner, of course. But the relationsh­ip between private tech companies and government actors raises troubling questions about state censorship and should disturb those across the political spectrum.

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