The Guardian (USA)

Musk ditches X’s election integrity team ahead of key votes around world

- Lisa O'Carroll in Brussels and Dan Milmo

Elon Musk, owner of X, has confirmed he has ditched his team working to prevent disruption to elections, just days after the EU announced the platform, formerly known as Twitter, had the highest proportion of disinforma­tion in three European countries.

Ahead of 70 elections around the globe in the coming year, the controvers­ial businessma­n confirmed on X: “Oh you mean the ‘Election Integrity’ Team that was underminin­g election integrity? Yeah, they’re gone.”

According to reports, several staff working out of the Dublin office including the co-lead of election disinforma­tion team, Aaron Rodericks, have left the company.

Overnight Musk appeared to give his first reaction to EU claims that X had the highest ratio of disinforma­tion of the large social media platforms with a picture of three penguins bearing the logos of Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube saluting another penguin bearing the X logo.

Rodericks had recently secured an injunction against the company restrainin­g the company from taking disciplina­ry action after he had posted informatio­n about the company’s recruitmen­t of staff for his team on his personal account.

He claimed the company did nothing after he had been subjected to a barrage of abuse from people who accused him of trying to suppress freedom of speech on X.

Last month he posted an advert on LinkedIn for eight new roles revealing he was seeking people with a “passion for protecting the integrity of elections and civic events, X is certainly at the centre of the conversati­on”.

Sweeping new laws came into force in August, compelling social media platforms to remove fake accounts, disinforma­tion and hate speech, with X rivals Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, Google and Microsoft all taking action and reporting back to the EU.

While Twitter quit the code of practice designed by the EU to help the companies comply with the new laws,

Musk promised earlier this year he would comply with the rules.

Concerns over the platform’s approach to content moderation under Musk’s leadership have triggered an advertisin­g boycott of the company, which relies on ads for the majority of its income.

Musk has admitted that advertisin­g revenues have fallen by about 60% since he bought the business last year and has blamed anti-hate speech campaign groups for the decline. He is suing the Center for Countering Digital Hate over its coverage of X and has also threatened to sue the Anti-Defamation League, which has raised concerns about antisemiti­c content on the platform.

Farhad Divecha, managing director of London-based digital marketing agency Accuracast, said: “The fact that Elon Musk seems to have disbanded the team that deals with election integrity sends a clear signal that preventing disinforma­tion or maintainin­g a level of integrity isn’t a priority for X. This is one more factor adding to the concerns about brand safety, or ensuring brands aren’t associated with objectiona­ble content.”

The company was approached for comment.

 ?? ?? Elon Musk, CEO of X, speaks to the media after a gathering of tech CEOs on Capitol Hill in Washington, 13 September 2023. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP
Elon Musk, CEO of X, speaks to the media after a gathering of tech CEOs on Capitol Hill in Washington, 13 September 2023. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States