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Inside the EU’s war on free speech Elon Musk can't win this battle

(Credit: Marc Piasecki/Getty)


August 4, 2024   6 mins

The latest salvo in the ongoing battle between between Elon Musk and the EU came courtesy of the X owner. He revealed that in the run-up to the European elections, X was offered “an illegal secret deal”: if the platform would agree to secretly censoring online speech, then the European Commission wouldn’t fine it for violations of its new online content moderation law, the Digital Services Act (DSA). X refused to cooperate, but all the other major platforms accepted the deal.

Musk’s revelation came shortly after Thierry Breton, the EU’s censorship czar, announced the Commission’s preliminary findings that X’s new “blue check” verification system was in violation of the DSA. Given that anyone can now subscribe and obtain a “verified status” — unlike before Musk when the platform arbitrarily decided who was worthy of the coveted blue check — this, he stated, undermines users’ ability to make informed decisions about account authenticity.

The Commission also accused X of “fail[ing] to provide access to its public data to researchers”, as mandated by the DSA. It urged the company to address such breaches or face a fine up to 6% of its total worldwide annual turnover, which was approximately $3.4 billion in 2023. Failure to comply could result in X being banned from operating in the EU altogether.

The line trotted out by the Commission is that this all about “transparency” and protecting users from deception and disinformation. But the truth, as Musk suggests, is that this is really about the EU’s desire — and the DSA’s ultimate goal — to secretly control the online narrative. So much for transparency.

This mission to censor has been backed up by Mike Benz, a former Trump official and cybersecurity expert who has alleged that “granting researchers access to X’s public data” isn’t quite as benign as it sounds. In fact, it’s a cover for the EU’s attempt to “use the DSA to force X to restaff the censorship squad fired when Elon took over”. Elon got rid of the team because, as the Twitter Files revealed, their sole purpose was to act upon government requests for censorship. Hence Benz’s claim that these “researchers” are actually “political operatives”. Musk reposted Benz’s analysis with one word of comment — “Exactly” — adding that if the EU pursues an enforcement action against X, he will take them to court.

The language and accusations are nothing new. The ground rules for this battle were laid the moment Musk took over Twitter and tweeted “the bird is freed”. Breton immediately replied: “In Europe, the bird will fly by our rules,” with a reference to the DSA, which had been officially signed into law that same month.

Even though Musk initially pledged to “respect the future European regulation”, the honeymoon didn’t last long. In May 2023, he pulled out of the EU’s Code of Practice on Disinformation, which started out voluntary but was subsequently made de facto legally binding under the DSA. This triggered an investigation, in December, into whether the platform violated the DSA in areas such as “risk management, content moderation, dark patterns, advertising transparency and data access for researchers”. Last week it concluded that it did, hence the latest showdown.

It’s hard to see how Musk can win this battle. Especially considering that his pro-free speech stance hasn’t just put him toe-to-toe with the EU, but also with a number of other governments around the world. Musk has attacked “takedown” requests in Brazil, India, Australia and Turkey and has even challenged some of these demands through national courts. In almost every case, however, the platform has ended up complying with governments’ requests. Indeed, a report from last year showed that under Musk, X had approved more than 80% of censorship requests from governments.

“It’s hard to see how Musk can win this battle.”

So even as Musk publicly challenges the EU, he is removing posts — as many X users have lamented — because of non-compliance with the DSA. On 10 October, for example, days after Hamas’s attack, Breton issued a warning to Musk over alleged “disinformation”; X responded by immediately removing or flagging tens of thousands of pieces of content.

Accusing Musk of hypocrisy, however, would be to miss the point. Complying with these requests is often the only way that the company can continue to operate — and at least Musk, unlike the other major platform owners, has brought online censorship into the open. The publication of the groundbreaking Twitter Files, remember, revealed the shocking level of collusion between the US administration and social media companies.

More to the point, though, X, despite the censorship, remains the only platform where information is allowed to flow relatively freely. Indeed, it remains the single biggest threat to the establishment’s desire for full-spectrum information control — and that is why they are coming down on it so hard. But one man, no matter how rich or powerful, cannot be expected to single-handedly stand up to some of the most powerful governments in the world — let alone to the European Union, the world’s most influential supranational institution.

There’s also another factor to consider. The global attack on free speech isn’t just the whim of out-of-control, power-hungry politicians and bureaucrats. It’s a systemic problem that relates to the structural decay of liberal-democratic institutions, particularly in the West. As our societies degenerate into de facto oligarchies controlled by increasingly delegitimised political-economic elites, this manipulation of public opinion — not only through propaganda delivered via traditional mass media channels but also, increasingly, by policing and micromanaging the public conversation taking place on social media platforms — has come to be seen as an imperative for keeping the status quo safe from the threat of democracy. This is compounded by the growing militarisation of the geopolitical context, which requires an even more compliant populace given its political and economic consequences.

It’s no coincidence that the censorship-industrial complex started emerging in the second half of the 2010s. This was the time when the West was rocked by an unprecedented “populist” backlash against globalisation and the neoliberal order — Trump, Brexit, the Yellow Vests, and the rise of Eurosceptic parties and movements across Europe.

It was also when the path of future confrontation with Russia was being laid in Ukraine — and when Nato started developing the hybrid or cognitive warfare doctrine, which conceptualises the management of Western public opinion as an integral part of warfare. As Jens Stoltenberg, Nato’s former Secretary General, put it in 2019: “Nato must remain prepared for both conventional and hybrid threats: from tanks to tweets.”

The Covid-19 pandemic, which saw the first mass deployment of online censorship, bought Western elites some time. But not for long. Today, a “populist” backlash is once again engulfing the West: Right-populist parties are surging across Europe, and Trump is on course to winning the next US election. Meanwhile, escalating tensions in Ukraine have detonated into a no-longer-so-proxy war between Nato and Russia. From the perspective of Western elites, this all calls for a doubling down on the censorship regime, with a major difference: online censorship used to occur behind closed doors, extra-legally and in a context of plausible deniability of behalf of governments; today it is being institutionalised and constitutionalised through tools such as the Digital Services.

Elites conveniently justify their censorship in two ways: by constantly expanding the scope of “hate speech” to cover almost anything; and, more ominously, by rebranding critical opinions, especially on foreign policy and geopolitical matters, as “disinformation” or examples of foreign interference. It’s no coincidence that the European Commission’s first-ever DSA report was entirely focused on the question of “Russian disinformation”. Tellingly, the report puts “Kremlin-aligned accounts” — potentially any account that is critical of Nato — almost on the same plane as accounts that are connected or associated with the Russian state.

This deliberate blurring of the line between illegal and harmful speech, and between critical opinion and foreign propaganda, is central to the censorship regime, as it effectively allows EU elites to determine what hundreds of millions of Europeans can or cannot say and read online. It’s state-sanctioned censorship, plain and simple. And it should come as no surprise that the greatest threat to free speech today comes from the EU: the bloc’s entire institutional edifice, after all, is geared towards constraining democracy, by transferring power to unaccountable elites largely insulated from the demos. In turn, the top-down imposition of unpopular policies on the people of Europe inevitably engenders opposition, which then requires the suppression of free speech to counter the backlash. It’s a vicious feedback loop.

This sort of mass censorship should really be understood as a desperate oligarchy’s last line of defence — and no one encapsulates this oligarchy better than Breton himself, a former businessman and military and intelligence contractor turned technocrat-in-chief. If this were a movie, one couldn’t imagine a better choice than him as the arch-enemy of the populist rabble rouser Musk. But it isn’t a movie. This is a struggle that will define the future of democracy for years to come. And if we expect Musk to fight for the rest of us, we’ve already lost.


Thomas Fazi is an UnHerd columnist and translator. His latest book is The Covid Consensus, co-authored with Toby Green.

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Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
4 months ago

Quite simply, TF’s most profound and well-articulated essay for Unherd.

I’ve dished out plenty of negative comments on previous essays by this writer, but have no qualms in congratulating him for putting his finger on the pulsating issue that will affect us all.

If we lose the ability (or facility) to dissent from the ‘chosen narrative’ we might as well give up. Fazi’s right in his conclusion that how the battle for online censorship by the EU pans out will determine whether we become subject to the same authoritarian constraints as citizens of China or Russia, or continue to enjoy the democratic freedoms our forebears fought long and hard to establish for us.

On this side of the Atlantic, the new Labour government will simply fall into line with the EU. Starmer’s speech yesterday confirmed his intention to “co-operate” – whatever the cost. Platforms such as Unherd might find themselves at risk. We subscribers already have some understanding of how comments can be taken down but the policing required would increase to a level that would make the business model unviable.

Unherd – alongside X, you’re the canary in the mine.

Bret Larson
Bret Larson
4 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Freedom of speech is key. Those against it are nazies and commies.

leonard o'reilly
leonard o'reilly
4 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

This is a good, and important, essay, and I am surprised as you appear to be that Thomas Fazi wrote it.
Always be wary of those who use words like misinformation and disinformation. They are not so much certain about what is true as they are that you(pl) don’t.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
4 months ago

This piece is entirely consistent with TF’s writing generally so I can’t imagine why anyone would be surprised by it.

Davey M
Davey M
4 months ago
Reply to  Michael Clarke

nor how you could disagree with what he has previously written if you agree with this piece.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
4 months ago
Reply to  Davey M

Don’t be ridiculous. Read other comments, which also contrast this piece with previous efforts.

Are you seriously suggesting we should all be corraled into a uniform agreement based upon who the writer is?

The beauty of being able to disagree or agree, depending on content rather than “the name” is being lost, and your comment is redolent of that reductive mindset.

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Exactly, first part of of article about EU censoring content was great.
But his efforts to link every subject to supposed NATO war against Russia in Ukraine is tedious and so obvious.
Fazi is communist.
Does anyone believe he wants free speech when his side is in charge?

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
4 months ago

I apologise for hanging on to your coat-tails, however you did mention what I’m commenting upon AND I seem unable to post except as a reply.
When the Leeds(UK Northern CIty) Riot was kicking off last week, it was about 4 days or so since the BBC had labelled X and all Social Media to be sources of misinformation. Yet I watched the riot unfold on X and social media videos, ALL the while NOT a peep from the BBC except for a static headline about ‘disturbances’ or ‘unrest’ in Leeds. The BBC kept virtually out of it. Then the following day, it had a link to X for videos of the riot.

The BBC is the most useless but widespread source (lack) of information. It’s generally swallows Govt propaganda, then regurgitates it under the guise of ‘Verified’ information.

Every so often an article slips through. For example if you used the BBC for your source of information on Ukraine you would wonder how Russia has managed to raise 4 armies, in fact probably more men than there are citizens in the Federation, lose Crimea every month for 2 years, wonder if all the destroyed buildings we see on X etc are the outskirts of Moscow, AND how we can be worried about Russia advancing into Europe when they’ve retreated or been pushed back due to poor or lack of equipment, morale and troops almost to the Chinese border.

Then during the siege of Bakhmut a BBC article appeared with casualty figures for both sides (the estimated BBC propagada ones for the Russians MONTHLY) plus a daily (IIRC) figure of Ukraine casualties from a quote by Zelensky. Curiously the BBC must think none of its readers have any ability to multiply. All you had to do was multiply the daily Zelensky figure by 30 and lo and behold their casualties were virtually identical to Russia’s monthly total. Such articles are rare, BUT they do appear.

Usually when the truth leaks out it is because some decision by the West is to be announced that would make no sense IF we believed the propaganda.
The BBC MUST have it’s licence fee scrapped or massively reduced, I see no reason why I pay for its propaganda so I can use my electronic equipment to search for accurate news.
Finally slightly off topic. IF the UK can jail Roger Hallam & his cult followers for 5 and 4 years respectively for the damage they did by conspiring to block the highways. Why have the Police not apprehended, May, Cameron, Johnson, Sunak, Miliband, Brown and Starmer ? All caused and are causing far more damage with their Green Cult Myths than the Cult Members (Cult members according to the Judge) who were put away last week? Perhaps the BBC telling to truth about the costs of windmills/solar panels and their total uselessness for driving a modern electrical grid might be the start of an attempt to provide honest news, facts and promote open discussions?

mac mahmood
mac mahmood
3 months ago

And always be wary of those who uses phrases like antisemite and antisemitism.

Konstantinos Stavropoulos
Konstantinos Stavropoulos
4 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Thomas Fazi is a left wing columnist that comes “from the past”. He is knowledgeable and he is not supporting a strict narrow political idea but what he thinks is good and right. Not many left on the left nowadays. Many nice people on the left who want to do good but the younger are lost in the chaotic Infowars while the older have quit the job..!

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago

He is not knowledgeable at all.
He is “mini me” Corbyn.
Everything is the fault of the West but dictatorships like Russia and China and terrorists like Hamas are just great.
He is enemy of freedom.
I don’t believe in freedom for enemies of freedom in the West.
I admit that I have no idea how to really distinguish between honest discussions of how to make West better and propagandist for enemies of the West.
I believe Fazi, like Corbyn, is in the second camp.
I am often told by people on the left that they hold honest believes.
So what?
Being communist or far left now with all the historical evidence about their crimes against humanity marks you as despicable human being in my book.

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

I looked at first paragraph agreed with it but posted to my mates:
But I bet you he will linked this issue to “poor Mother Russia” and Nato war in Ukraine.
Obviously, he did.
Fazi is communist, supporter of Russia war in Ukraine.
He has no problem with supporting Russian and Chinese dictatorships.
Yes, West has a problem with censorship.
But complaining about censorship of propaganda of regimes hostile to the West is bat shit crazy.
Should Britain or USA allow broadcast of Nazi and Japanese propaganda during ww2?
I have no idea how to solve the problem of censorship in the West.
But allowing hostile actors whether governments or terrorists to freely promote their views on MSM or Social media is not a solution.
Fazi knows about it.
But he wants more division in the West not less.

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

I don’t think elites care about what Unherd or even Spectator publish.
Readership is too small to matter.
But they care about X and other popular social media.
I already replied why Fazi and his “solutions” are part of the problem.

Josef Švejk
Josef Švejk
4 months ago

Thank you for this article fairly covering the battle between Elon Musk and these European bumpkin technocrats. Inch by inch they creep shutting down free comment. It is a shame other social media owners are not as brave as Elon. His tactic of delay, stop, move on, continue and wait for a change in the leader of the Saal-Schutz is pure wizardry.

Peter B
Peter B
4 months ago

A really important and excellent article.
It’s all too easy to believe that Musk’s account is correct and that he was indeed offered a “an illegal secret deal” by the EU commission staff.
I strongly (very strongly !) disagree with almost all of Thomas Fazi’s articles. But it’s vital that he’s free to publish his views and we are able to read and criticise them without censorship, mediation or moderation. And occasionally he comes up with something like this that makes it all worthwhile.
Similarly, Musk does and says some crazy stuff. But there are some quite brilliant and important things amongst all this. Better a world with both dross and brilliance than humdrum mediocrity where no actual original thinking is going on.

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
4 months ago
Reply to  Peter B

“Better a world with both dross and brilliance than humdrum mediocrity where no actual original thinking is going on.”

Best sentence I have read this week (and I’ve been reading 2 award-winning books).

Bravo!

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
4 months ago
Reply to  Peter B

Dross and Brilliance? Really? I prefer Truth and Lies – Sometimes the Brilliance is a lie and the Dross is the Truth. This is particularly so in Western Politics at present. My biggest fear is that without successful resistance to the Woke establishment, then the US in particular is going to descend into 3rd world hell BUT with the prospect of some moron in Washington attempting to maintain its perceived role in the world by nuking the countries about to replace it.
The West is committing suicide AND it will eventually dawn on everyone that’s what is happening. The problem being, it’s too late at the moment of death to do anything about it.

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Peter B

I am sorry Peter, but how can you agree with 2nd part of article when he starts his usual rubbish about NATO war against Russia in Ukraine?
I already replied in detail to another post why I think propagandists for the dictatorships should not be allowed to publish in the West.
Did Britain and USA allowed pro Nazi propaganda in ww2?
You can only be communist or far left now with all the evidence of their crimes against humanity if you are despicable human being.

Y Way
Y Way
3 months ago
Reply to  Andrew F

You cannot rid the world of bad propaganda without ridding the world of truth as well. Sorry.

And what group decides what is bad propaganda? And what is good or okay? We already have seen these censorship regimes go after political opponents. You cannot have democracy and this level of censorship.

You can only agree with this censorship if the party you agree with holds the power. You will hate this censorship regime when your side is not in control.

Part of the problem is that, currently, the Liberals seem to think this censorship is a good thing because they honestly believe that people who disagree with them are simply wrong or bad or dumb.

What if the other side gains power and does not get rid of these censorship powers?

What if a Hitler gains control of these mechanisms?

Today, a censored social media is exactly HOW Hitler controlled minds in Germany. He had a highly censored media. As did Stalin.

Freedom of speech may allow Hitler or Stalin to speak but it does not allow either to control the narrative.

That is the whole point of of free speech. You cannot have free speech AND this level of censorship.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
3 months ago
Reply to  Andrew F

The problem with this is that anybody who has any way critical of Western reaction to Russia over the past decades can be described as “a propagandist for the dictatorship”. Which means free speech course corrections are made more difficult.

Anyone who has seen anything of the terrible economic conditions following the economic shop therapy supported by the west during the Democratic period would understand straight away why Western democracy has such a bad name in Russia. It is possible to believe that Putin is a disaster for Russia; squandering its vast resources to essentially creating a collector classic mafia state, while also being critical of the West

Harry Child
Harry Child
4 months ago

I hope the Remainers read this article. The Eu’s democratic deficit is truly awful and I fear Labour will try to follow their example with endless petty regulations.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
4 months ago
Reply to  Harry Child

Most of the remainers that I know will be entirely in agreement with what the EU is doing. These are people who won’t really be happy until they have cameras in our bedrooms.

Martin Johnson
Martin Johnson
4 months ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

Yes, cameras in our bedrooms, but not theirs.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
3 months ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

This is a pretty silly comment.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago
Reply to  Harry Child

It won’t make any difference. Pre election I was banned from youtube for stating facts. That ONLY a Reform victory would save the UK from the Uniparty. That the Tories needed to get ZERO seats. That it was possible to achieve all that simply by the Brexiteers thinking in terms of the Brexit Unity not the Uniparty Wing partisanship OR not voting at all. I was banned for repeating that truth. It was deemed ‘spamming’ and ‘misinformation’.
Well, we now have what I said we’d get. I even pointed out that IF for no other reason, we should vote Reform to scrap Net Zero. We didn’t so now we are going to suffer the consequences.
Ironic, as we got a taster of what is to come when Manchester Airport suffered a power failure (multiple power failures actually , which is why their backup systems also kept failing. IF the reports are to be believed)
I even warned then that this was like the classic ‘disaster scenario’ – almost ALWAYS before a disaster occurs, a near miss happens. BUT because it was a near miss, little happens to address the issue.
Sadly the Global It outage is another example of how dependent we are now on IT. BUT that only hit a small section of society.in the UK. When the grid fails EVERYTHING is going to suffer because EVERYTHING is dependent at some point of electrical power.
We still have time to mitigate though NOT escape grid failures BUT will anyone in power or in the country, never mind Remainers listen? No.
So whilst I understand your hope, it is a vain one IF you think it can avoid the disasters coming. They will only understand when they occur. We are no longer a society that lives by the biblical wisdom we have for for millennia. Where we once would be urged to be the Wise Virgins with their spare oil, Now we are told they are to be despised, their foresight and care is bad, wrong. That they must distributed their spare oil to the foolish so all may equally be in the dark. AND if they won’t do so voluntarily, they will be forced to share.
It isn’t going to end well. Perhaps IF you decide to get spare oil, you should hide it for the days it will be needed?
On a final note of Schadenfreude. I look at the Irish riots over immigration, their desire before the Rwanda plan was shelved, to close the NI border AND I cannot help but smile. (I’m proudly English but 3rd generation Irish immigrant) Because now the Irish aren’t needed by the EU bash Britain project, they are the butt of so many EU policies one truly has to wonder IF the EU hates them so much they want Ireland destroyed more than the Irish claimed the English wanted them destroyed! From immigration to culling the Irish cattle. Who can seriously look at the EU as anything but an insane dictatorship?

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Harry Child

But remoaners don’t care.
Like all woke they don’t want any discussions showing contradictions and lies at core of their believes.
They only believe in democracy if it goes their way.
I lost many friends over Brexit and then covid.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
3 months ago
Reply to  Andrew F

Demonising “Remainers” probably a majority in the country is hardly a very helpful position. I support Brexit but do you really think that this has been handled well? The British people have been given numerous rational self-interested reasons to regret their vote including longer queues airports etc and things which really affect their everyday lives.

The UK was not prepared for Brexit had no idea where it wanted to go or at least there were 10 different views of the destination!

Andrew R
Andrew R
4 months ago

Anymore news from UnHerd regarding the Global Disinformation Index, did they get a response from Clare Melford?

They appear to be going strong still peddling their “narratives”.

Paul T
Paul T
4 months ago
Reply to  Andrew R

Expect to hear fairly soon that Lammy has decided to quadruple funding to them.

Michael Walsh
Michael Walsh
4 months ago

Going to be interesting if Trump wins and the EU crooks go after Musk.
EU won’t pay for NATO and will then go after Trumps new best mate
We are living in interesting times

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
4 months ago
Reply to  Michael Walsh

If Trump wins, it will be interesting to see how he responds to the EU’s attempt to prevent free speech on X.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago
Reply to  Michael Clarke

Or IF he is as lucky next time.

Simon Templar
Simon Templar
3 months ago
Reply to  Michael Walsh

And if Trump doesn’t win and Musk is arrested, who will fight for truth?

Lily Dragonfly
Lily Dragonfly
4 months ago

Great article which I would absolutely encourage distributing around to your network specially if you live in Europe.
In Europe so many of us have become complacent, like sheeps thnking they live in the best of worlds because we live in so called “western democracies”. The author is right pointing put that we need to keep fighting for free speech because such rights are hard to get and easy to loose… specially when we think we have nothing to fear…
The question that keeps bugging me is… how do we fight?!

Simon Templar
Simon Templar
3 months ago
Reply to  Lily Dragonfly

How did Solzhenitsyn fight USSR propaganda? As a free-speech martyr. Refuse to comply. Amplify dissent against any political party which claims they oppose hate speech or disinformation. It’s the existential issue of democracy.
We have the whole of the 20th Century as examples of how people belatedly resisted ideologies like Nazism, and Communism. Resist now. But you have to resist on behalf of those you may not agree with, because free speech rights are for bad opinions as well as good ones.

Y Way
Y Way
3 months ago
Reply to  Simon Templar

And here in lies the crux of the problem. We see so many people here pointing out that this author favors Russia and that this whole article is written just so that his side can speak freely. Maybe so.

But he isn’t wrong that we should be allowed to speak freely. We get ourselves into this problem because some people think that what other people have to say should be smothered because it’s wrong. These people don’t understand freedom of speech and how it works.

Freedom of speech works because you are in a public domain where the debate allows for winners and losers. You have to believe that people can make up their own minds by listening to both sides and determining what is the truth or what is best. If you do not believe people are capable of that, you don’t believe in free speech.

We can now see that a lot of people don’t believe in free speech. They think they need to control what other people think and say.

I have never understood that level of self-righteousness. And that’s what it is. I have never believed that some people have the right to determine what other people ought to think. Because I don’t know what God exists that will allow only the good people to have that control.

Roger Tilbury
Roger Tilbury
4 months ago

Good article. One possibility isn’t mentioned though – that Musk simply removes X/Twitter access in the EU.
He’s just crazy enough to do it, and there are probably enough people who are VPN savvy that he wouldn’t lose as much revenue as you might think.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
4 months ago
Reply to  Roger Tilbury

It is a real option that Musk should consider. I would miss X but I would rather Musk removed it from the EU than surrender to the EU. The fight to restore free speech will go on.

mac mahmood
mac mahmood
3 months ago
Reply to  Michael Clarke

UK not in the EU. So, why would anyone in the UK miss it?

John Riordan
John Riordan
3 months ago
Reply to  mac mahmood

That’s a good question, and the answer might depend upon the extent to which the UK intends to informally align with the EU. It’s been 4 years since we left the EU, and we haven’t even got rid of the ridiculous waste of time that is the cookie popup, let alone the wider colossal waste of money that is GDPR.

So I’d be very surprised if the government we have now would side with Elon Musk against Brussels in such a highly-charged political dispute. I would much prefer that the UK did side with Musk of course, I just have no confidence in our government to do the same.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago
Reply to  Roger Tilbury

I think Musk should do a deal with VPN software companies OR buy one, then offer free VPN software to users. As Microsoft now has their own ‘security software’ which has worked well for me for decades.

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Roger Tilbury

Really?
How many people are going to use and pay for VPN just to access X platform?
I would bet less than 10%.
I had 30 years in IT and computer and network security.
Most people are lazy and tech ignorant.
Only last week intern in my partner law firm told her that his computer is not working.
One of the screens was in power safe mode.
She says it is quite common now with “covid” grads.
They are dire with sort of fog on a brain.
So, we have another example of how great lockdowns were.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
4 months ago

this is really about the EU’s desire — and the DSA’s ultimate goal — to secretly control the online narrative.
Is this still a secret? If anything, these alphabet bodies have been quite clear about their desire to control everything, from narratives to food choices to how and where people live. It’s happening in the US, too, where a govt that is allegedly constrained by a Constitution in restricting speech, simply outsources the task to third-party actors and guides their efforts.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Ask the Irish. Migrants not Irish, Bugs not Beef 😉 Odd how once they were no longer of use in the Bash Britain Campaign, the NI border being open was an issue, at least for Irish voters and the EU set upon the Irish!
I”m amazed Sunak didn’t point out, he removed more migrants to Dublin thanks to his Rwanda policy than he did to Rwanda AND he had no need to Jamaica them, they went of their own accord. 😉

Paul MacDonnell
Paul MacDonnell
4 months ago

First rate analysis.

Andrew Holmes
Andrew Holmes
4 months ago

It’s a systemic problem that relates to the structural decay of liberal-democratic institutions, particularly in the West.
So true, given that liberal-democratic institutions are virtually absent outside of the West.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago
Reply to  Andrew Holmes

They will soon be absent in the West. We are headed for societal collapse. No modern society can survive without a reliable electric grid. Windmills and Solar panels guarantee a failing one. The UK cannot feed the numbers (much lied about too) we have, if we revert to a pre-industrial society.
With Labour and Miliband that is coming to a place near us all faster than with the other wing of the Uniparty, the Tories.
If EUronews is to be believed (and the Eigen-Values sub-stack is far more informative on the numbers as to why and probably when) then in about 3 years, 2028, the UK grid will start to fail.
Then the web-page Dowden put up on the very day the election was called, may be useful reading. Though anyone who reads widely enough, has probably gone way beyond storing cans of tinned meat.
https://prepare.campaign.gov.uk/
Ironic. I laughed at the Y2K disaster preppers. Perhaps because I knew much of the software I worked on had been prepared for Y2K in the previous decade at least. BUT you can’t prepare a viable alternative to a modern society with reliable electric power without killing millions.

John Riordan
John Riordan
4 months ago

Every so often, Unherd puts out an article that justifies the entire annual subscription on its own. This is one of them.

When I first read, last week, that Musk had refused to do a secret censorship deal with the EU, I was predictably disgusted with the EU, but also resigned and unsurprised. This, I now realise, is one of those look-back-and-see-how-far-we’ve-come moments.

Except of course, not in a good way. If you’d said to me just a few short years ago that this sort of thing would be publicly exposed and there wouldn’t even be a scandal because the people behind it are so shameless and insulated from any popular backlash, I’d have scoffed with disbelief. Now, I’m not remotely surprised: I’ll only be surprised if there actually will be any consequences.

Steve Everitt
Steve Everitt
4 months ago

EU dictators. No surprises that the eurocrats (oops bureaucrats) are imposing directives to create the United States of Europe under its beneficent rulership.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
3 months ago
Reply to  Steve Everitt

The West, NATO, seems intent on a war. Everywhere I look I can see the warmongers in the ascendant. I can only assume , that unlike Clinton, many of our leaders not only smoked dope, but inhaled it because their attitudes are clearly insane. Though, perhaps there really are Lizard People running the White-house and COVID and the experimental vaccines didn’t reduce the population enough? 😉

leonard o'reilly
leonard o'reilly
4 months ago

I misspoke somewhat in an earlier comment. The issue with mis/dis, of course, is who gets to decide what is inaccurate or untrue. They will have the power to shame and silence the reprobates. But to decide what is not true, you first need to be in possession of the truth, or truths. There is a very good article by Freddie Attenborough in The Critic on this very subject. Some of the truths we need to be set straight on concern mass migration, gender, and Net Zero ( climate change ). There is a skein of these ‘truths’ but they are all connected. Wherever you go, it’s always the same issues, and always the same righteous taskmasters. They have to be fought at every turn.

John Riordan
John Riordan
4 months ago

“But to decide what is not true, you first need to be in possession of the truth, or truths”

Not so. If you capitalise the word: Truth – then it’s merely a matter of knowing what you want people to believe is the truth.
Nothing is more fatal to liberty and democracy than permitting politicians to determine what is true and therefore what can be said.

Marek Nowicki
Marek Nowicki
3 months ago

I am afr

Andrew D
Andrew D
3 months ago
Reply to  Marek Nowicki

What happened? Were you carried off mid-sentence by an EU goon? Now we’re all afr

Marek Nowicki
Marek Nowicki
3 months ago

I am afraid that the only way to stop this trend is to limit the governent to absolut minimum. The existing monster of elected and unelected gov folks just hate the idea if accountability and service to the electorate….

Emre S
Emre S
3 months ago

I think this is partly about a barrier to entry. Free speech was formulated at a time when it had to be printed, circulated, and bought which acted as a form of moderation. A platform like X.com can turn a potentially dangerous idea or disinformation into a global phenomenon within less than a day with its use of algorithms automatically finding and promoting viral content. It’s not reasonable to expect we can have completely unfettered free speech on a globally viral platform like X or other social media.

Andrew F
Andrew F
3 months ago
Reply to  Emre S

I am surprised by all the downvotes.
Surely for West to survive we need to fight propaganda of dictators and terrorists.
People like Fazi, really.
How to distinguish between honest discussions of issues between people who want continuation of Western Civilisation and hostile actors?
Unfortunately, I have no idea how to draw this distinction in real time on real platforms.
Some people on here seem to believe in free for all.
But your comment is factually correct.
We had moderation before internet age.

Saul D
Saul D
3 months ago

Continental Europeans, historically, are much more used to, and so more comfortable with censorship regimes: https://www.ieg-ego.eu/en/threads/european-media/censorship-and-freedom-of-the-press
It’s quite probable the average EU administrator doesn’t have any sense of understanding of the hullabaloo this causes in countries with a strong history of free-speech, and perhaps see regulation of speech as entirely normal and necessary for ‘good’ administration.

mac mahmood
mac mahmood
3 months ago

All managerial systems,even those instituted by democratic governments, need to control the flow of information particularly when the information tends to undermine the narrative promoted by them. In the wake of the attack on the zionists in Palestine the need for such controls in order to maintain what can only be termed as ‘the zionism consensus’, under cover of an attempt to tackle hate speech, has become rather pressing. Hence the troubles faced by Musk. The irony is that in pursuing Musk the EU is simply trying to protect a populist narrative in Europe/UK that does not brook any criticism of zionism.

0 0
0 0
3 months ago

Given that Musk is always trying to tell X users what to think as soon as they log on, he doesn’t make a convincing free speech champion.

Lesley van Reenen
Lesley van Reenen
3 months ago
Reply to  0 0

You are free to follow whomever you wish on X. You can also block people. You haven’t ever been there, have you!

Ex Nihilo
Ex Nihilo
3 months ago

An extremely pertinent bookend to this article is found in the work done by Freddie Sayers of Unherd vis a vis the Global Disinformation Index, a murky sinister entity with under appreciated power to silence entire platforms.

https://unherd.com/2024/04/inside-the-disinformation-industry/

Chuck Burns
Chuck Burns
3 months ago

I say Let us show support for Musk and Free Speech by joining X and sporting the Blue Check. Let’s fight the dystopian EU.

Martin Ashford
Martin Ashford
3 months ago

Good article. What we must turn our attention to, however, is what do we, the people, do about this? As the very people who are having our freedoms constantly attacked and withdrawn, what do we do? Something. It’s well past time that the masses moved in a coordinated way to let the elites know we’re still here. We’re being battered from pillar to post (no pun intended) and so far all we’ve done is turn the other cheek. Time for a more Old Testament type of approach?

Tessa B
Tessa B
3 months ago

Adding more to the can of worms….
https://www.public.news/p/defund-the-thought-police
I am feeling uncomfortable.
Note “Our friends” at City Journal.
(Our friends at City Journal have just published an excellent overview of a recent meeting I organized in London of free speech investigators, journalists, and advocates from around the world. A new friend and colleague, Jacob Howland, the Provost and Dean of Intellectual Foundations at the University of Austin, authored the piece, and gave me permission to re-publish it. I hope you enjoy it as much as we did! — Michael)
Just an aside, but the author writing about the Censorship meeting (which I was alerted to via UnHerd in one of their videos) has written an opinion article on Israel/Palestine which is chilling. Surely in a conflict, the pain and motivations of all those affected and involved need to be understood. I looked at the names of those who had signed the Westminster Declaration and have to say I hold different opinions on certain subjects to some of those that have signed. Would they really support my right to disagree with them……these questions are not simple?
Conflict Resolution, peace, sustainability and free speech?
Enjoyable? not after reading about the author Jacob Howland and the comments on his Israel article, I am just left feeling with a sense of darkness. Hopefully UnHerd will keep an open mind about the “Conference”, Censorship, Propaganda, Peace and Conflict Resolution….the pain and motivations.
More worms…..the UN’s Pact for the Future
https://merylnass.substack.com/p/uns-pact-for-the-future-summit-of
More worms, more questions….
https://substack.com/@michaelginsburg/note/c-44558528
https://informedheart.substack.com/p/arc-legatum-and-fake-freedom-funds
The Censorship Industrial Complex, Omidyar and Freedom FundHere, the subtext is another way that this totalitarianism is imploding in on itself. Albeit not quite so obvious to the man-in-the-street. Journalist Michael Shellenberger, who is central to the release of the Twitter Files and coined the term Censorship Industrial Complex (pdf of his legal testimony) in a massive US Court battle, has joined the Board of a company which is funded by the same Omidyar Group that is the Censorship Industrial Complex. (See pg14 of his hyperlinked testimony above). How can this be? Let me explain….see link.
Anyone any thoughts?

Arthur King
Arthur King
3 months ago

Musk’s goal is to expose the EU leadership’s totalitarianism

Y Way
Y Way
3 months ago

“This is a struggle that will define the future of democracy for years to come. And if we expect Musk to fight for the rest of us, we’ve already lost.”

Worth reading for this conclusion.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
3 months ago

I’m not actually convinced that the EU is Machiavellian machine imposing anti-democratic and illiberal policies by conscious strategic design. On another issue, a recent EU ruling following an investigation has imposed tariffs on Chinese EV imports, this is entirely blind as to whether the EV car manufacturer is based; Europe or China. So we have the spectacle of some EU manufacturers being subject to higher tariffs than Chinese ones (who have cooperated with the investigation). The reason I mentioned this is the EU actually does take seriously written laws and regulations; ideology and even self interest do not trump everything else, as in China. (This isn’t of course to say that there is not a strong ideology at play).

I do agree with Thomas Fazi that this is a structural issue; actually in reality few parts of the western political spectrum (spectrum assuming that it’s a one-dimensional line which is probably too simplistic these days) are very strong supporters of free speech. This by the way most certainly includes Republicans in the US over Israel – Hamas, however much I might agree with them on that issue. Belief in free speech to say what you already agree with, but not otherwise, is not free speech!

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
3 months ago

Personally I find it disappointing that Elon Musk, a bit like Donald Trump in a different way, is proving such a crude political operator. As Ed West, a conservative has mentioned, there are some real crazies given free reign now on X and also the tone of the comments can be really aggressive and unpleasant. There is an excellent free speech into favour of allowing this but the fact that the proprietor appears to uphold some of their opinions is not a good look.

And Musk certainly is now a political participant, constantly intervening with comments in various different countries affairs such as regarding the riots the United Kingdom. It is almost as if he is trying to confirm the establishment’s worst views of him and of latter day X.