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Archives for September 2023

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Not a great look for Musk.

A new Justice Department filing says that Elon Musk’s actions at X (formerly Twitter) might have violated a privacy order from the FTC, according to The Washington Post.

Seems like Musk may have made some bad decisions:

Multiple employees testified that Musk gave directives that were at odds with the company’s normal processes and policies, according to the filing.

Jacob Kastrenakes
Jacob Kastrenakes
Is X suppressing New York Times links?

Semafor has a story saying that could be the case.

Shares of New York Times stories on X have plummeted since mid-July, while competing outlets haven’t seen the same trajectory.

It’s not confirmed that the dip is X’s doing, but it wouldn’t be out of line: the company throttled links to the Times and a few other websites in August.

A chart from Semafor showing how shares to Times stories fell while competitors were mostly flat.
A chart from Semafor showing how shares to Times stories fell while competitors were mostly flat.
Image: Semafor
Wes Davis
Wes Davis
The Fifth Circuit Appeals court rules Biden admin “likely” violated the First Amendment.

A panel of judges ruled that government officials crossed a line while pressuring social media companies to curb covid misinformation, writing that they aren’t “permitted to advance these interests to the extent that it engages in viewpoint suppression.”

The court ... vacated much of U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty’s injunction, with the exception of a provision concerning alleged coercion, which it narrowed.

The 5th Circuit said the narrower injunction applied to the White House, the surgeon general, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the FBI, but would no longer apply to other federal officials covered by the lower court order.

The judges had previously lifted the injunction, and this narrower one is on hold for ten days as the administration pursues a review by the Supreme Court.