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The Twitter Files are a series of releases of select internal Twitter, Inc. documents that were made public, starting in December 2022, by CEO Elon Musk, who gave them to journalists Matt Taibbi, Bari Weiss, Lee Fang, and authors Michael Shellenberger, David Zweig and Alex Berenson shortly after Musk acquired Twitter on October 27, 2022. Taibbi and Weiss coordinated the publication of the documents with Musk, releasing details of the files as a series of Twitter threads.[1][2][3][4]
Taibbi was criticized for not redacting email addresses from published screenshots; Yoel Roth, Twitter's former head of Trust and Safety, called it \"fundamentally unacceptable\", and Musk conceded that the email addresses should have been redacted.[1] Though Musk was supportive of Roth while he was employed by Twitter, after his resignation he began publicly criticizing him and endorsing tweets making false accusations. This included an accusation that he was sexualizing children, which Donie O'Sullivan of CNN said is a \"common trope used by conspiracy theorists to attack people online\". Roth subsequently faced a wave of threats of violence serious enough for him to flee his home.[87][88]Musk directed his new head of Trust and Safety, Ella Irwin, to give screenshots of internal views of users' accounts to Weiss, which she posted online.[89] The publication of the screenshots, and a statement by Musk that writers working on the files would have unfettered access, raised concerns that people could access sensitive user data in violation of a 2022 privacy agreement between Twitter and the Federal Trade Commission.[89] On December 10, 2022, Musk threatened to sue any Twitter employee who leaked information to the press, despite his claims to be a \"free speech absolutist,\" and having released internal messages and emails to selected journalists. This threat was expressed in an all-hands, with Twitter employees given a pledge to sign indicating that they understood.[90][91]
Twitter's former CEO and co-founder Jack Dorsey urged Musk to release all the internal documents \"without filter\" at once, including all of Twitter's discussions around current and future actions on content moderation.[92] Dorsey later criticized Musk for only allowing the internal documents to be accessed by select people, suggesting that the files should have been made publicly available \"Wikileaks-style\" so that there were \"many more eyes and interpretations to consider\". Dorsey conceded that \"mistakes were made\" at Twitter but stated his belief that there was \"no ill intent or hidden agendas\" in the company. He also condemned the harassment campaigns waged against former Twitter employees, saying that it is \"dangerous\" and \"doesn't solve anything\".[93]
Miranda Devine, a columnist with the New York Post who was among the first to write about the laptop, told Fox News host Tucker Carlson that the presentation regarding the story wasn't the \"smoking gun we'd hoped for\".[94] Jim Geraghty of National Review wrote that \"the files paint an ugly portrait of a social-media company's management unilaterally deciding that its role was to keep breaking news away from the public instead of letting people see the reporting and drawing their own conclusions.\"[95]
Charlie Warzel of The Atlantic characterized the initial two threads as \"sloppy, anecdotal, devoid of context, and...old news,\" but wrote that the files demonstrated the \"immense power\" possessed by Big Tech platforms as a result of \"[outsourcing] broad swaths of our political discourse and news consumption to corporate platforms.\" He also suggested that Musk's core goal is to \"anger liberals\" and appeal to the political right, citing him allowing the documents to only be accessed by select people \"who've expressed alignment with his pet issues\" and telling his followers to vote Republican in the 2022 midterm elections.[97] 59ce067264
https://www.iyfusa.org/group/iyfusa-group/discussion/9bd21cf9-3e25-4c2a-9ff6-5e095ea072d6