This weekend, advertisers, regulators,
and Twitter users were all attentively watching Elon Musk’s Twitter feed for
any indication of whether the free speech absolutist could be trusted to do
things like effectively combat disinformation spread after taking over the
site. In what may be considered Musk’s first major misstep as Twitter’s new
owner, Musk chose that moment to amplify a far-right conspiracy theory in a
now-deleted tweet garnering scrutiny from all sides.
Musk’s tweet came amid a wave of
online chatter discussing what happened when an accused intruder, David Wayne
DePape, broke into House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s house, attacked her
now-hospitalized husband Paul with a hammer, and screamed out, “Where’s Nancy?”
Investigating possible motives, CBS News reviewed some of DePape’s
social media posts and confirmed that DePape had shared several far-right
conspiracy theories, including posts denying the Holocaust and tying Democratic
officials to child sex rings. CBS also reported that DePape allegedly had a
list of other targets.
It took Musk a few hours before he deleted the controversial
tweet. He has since mocked The New York Times for its report on the
deleted tweet but has seemingly offered no other explanation for tweeting out
the link. Musk wasn’t the only influential person tweeting the conspiracy about
Paul Pelosi’s attack. The Washington Post reported that many
right-wing personalities spread misinformation about the attack, seeming to
indicate an ongoing willingness to sow distrust over violent events, which is
what spurned Clinton's original tweet.
No one is sure how Musk's vision of
Twitter will play out, but he'll likely continue to face pressure from
advertisers, regulators, and Twitter users. At a time when Musk needs to
squeeze profits from his Twitter acquisition after already taking on $13
billion in debt it seems less than ideal to also risk millions in DSA fines.
But Musk also faces pressure from popular accounts that expect him to
follow through on his promise to prioritize free speech on Twitter. So far, Musk
announced that he plans to build a “content moderation council with widely
diverse viewpoints” that will seemingly judge every major decision when it
comes to restricting content or users.
In a letter to twitter advertisers on Thursday ahead of the deleted-tweet debacle, Musk had previously tweeted that “there is currently great danger that social media will splinter into far right wing and far left wing echo chambers that generate more hate and divide our society.” He aimed much of this criticism at “traditional media,” though, not mentioning how fake news can incite even seemingly savvy Twitter users to contribute to disinformation spread, just like the story Musk linked and then deleted.
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