Broadly, the reactions are divided into two camps: those who believe the revelations are a major scandal vindicating the worst conservative/populist accusations against “Big Tech,” and those who believe that the revelations are a “nothingburger” dressed up to look like a major scandal. Let’s call them Team Scandal and Team Nothingburger.
Here’s where Team Scandal has a point, however self-serving. Ever since Twitter pivoted from relatively untrammeled speech to increasingly intrusive moderation, the lack of clear rules and transparency—coupled with ideological slant—has been a problem. (For the record, I have been writing about this since 2015.) Numerous people have been suspended or permanently banned for vague and elusive reasons. Yes, many of them were people with odious opinions, such as far-right blogger Robert Stacy McCain, whose off-Twitter history includes Confederacy apologetics, defenses of “natural revulsion” toward interracial marriage, and anti-gay rants. But bad people are not an excuse for bad policies. When McCain was banned from Twitter in early 2016 for unspecified “targeted abuse,” even some people who stressed their loathing for him, such as “Popehat” blogger Ken White, saw this as troubling evidence of arbitrary and biased enforcement. (White, an attorney, insisted that no First Amendment issues are at stake since private corporations have a legal right to run their platforms any way they see fit but argued that arbitrary suspensions and expansive definitions of abuse are “bad business.”)
In other cases, as the Twitter Files releases confirm—and as not only the right-wing press but mainstream media outlets have reported before—steps were taken to reduce some posters’ visibility and reach without informing the targeted individuals or allowing them to appeal. The measures could include algorithmic “deboosting” which made the user’s tweets less likely to show up in followers’ feeds and blocking the user’s tweets from trending or showing up in searches.
The polemics over the Twitter Files have often focused on whether Twitter executives lied when they said in 2018 that they “do not shadow ban,” and most certainly not “based on political viewpoints or ideology.” To some extent, this argument boils down to a disagreement over terminology. People who use the term “shadow banning” loosely to mean lowering the visibility of a person’s tweets claim that the execs lied, because they did just that. But Twitter officials talked openly about the distinction they drew between shadow banning, which the company defined strictly as making a person’s tweets completely invisible to anyone but the user, and other practices it put under the heading of “visibility filtering.” The same Twitter executives who denied they shadow banned users readily conceded that they “rank” tweets and downrank ones from “bad-faith actors who intend to manipulate or divide the conversation.”
Fair enough; but this honest admission should still be worrying. Who gets to classify someone as a “bad-faith actor”? What constitutes manipulation and divisiveness as opposed to “healthy” polemics and exchanges?
And “based on political viewpoints or ideology” is also not as simple as it seems at first glance, since many people don’t see their political biases as biases. Thus, content moderators who allow self-proclaimed anti-fascists to get away with much more violent language than MAGA activists, or who allow progressives to attack conservative women or minorities with sexual or racial slurs that would not be tolerated from right-wingers, may sincerely believe that it’s not about politics but about good guys vs. bad guys. For the same reason, an online dogpile that includes the release of personal information (“doxxing”) and attempts to get someone fired may be rightly seen as harassment if the target is, say, a parent who brings a child to Drag Queen Story Hour, but not if it’s a “Karen” dubiously accused of racist behavior (such as calling a non-police parking hotline to report an illegally parked car whose owners turn out to be black).
Indeed, then-Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey openly discussed this issue in 2018 even as he denied that Twitter was shadow banning Republicans or making decisions based on ideology. In an August 2018 interview, Dorsey told CNN’s Brian Stelter: