Twitter 'made a mistake' in censoring news about Hunter Biden's laptop
Former executives of the social network admit to Congress that they dismissed the scandalous information found on the computer of the president's son.
Yoel Roth, Twitter's former director of Trust and Safety, acknowledged to congressmen on the House Oversight Committee that the social network "made a mistake" in censoring stories about Hunter Biden's laptop.
Roth stated that he personally advocated against censoring the story on the platform. However, he eventually did so because Hunter's case, he claims, had similarities to the 2016 Russian hacking targeting the Democratic National Committee, (DNC) when Russian government hackers accessed the Democratic National Convention database:
Roth admitted that he used disappearing messaging systems to communicate with government officials. He is being accused of being "intimately involved in the effort to censor Hunter Biden's laptop story."
Vijaya Gadde, Twitter's former chief legal officer, also testified in Congress that the company had received visits from federal agencies to remove certain content from the platform, and while she did not specify whether Hunter's story was one of them, she admitted that some of the information was censored because the photos on Hunter's computer "looked like they could have been obtained through hacking."
Republicans push harder to prove collusion between FBI and Twitter
The former Twitter executives are giving their statements in front of the new Republican majority in the House of Representatives, which decided to hold a congressional hearing to bring to a close the more than two-year-long investigation into the social network's censorship of the New York Post article. Hunter Biden's laptop contained scandalous and compromising content that could lead him to face legal action.
The Chairman of the Oversight and Accountability Committee, James Comer, alleged that Big Tech giants like Twitter are "under the control of people who are hostile to fundamental American principles of free speech and have colluded with federal agencies to censor stories embarrassing to President Joe Biden and his family."
The Republican majority indicated that it planned to push even harder to prove that FBI and Twitter had colluded to censor the story reported by The Post:
Comer stated that in the months leading up to Hunter's computer story, the FBI had already questioned senior Twitter executives about the validity of any story about the president's son: