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Social network X suspected of having biased its algorithm for foreign interference in France

Social network X suspected of having biased its algorithm for foreign interference in France

By The New Obs with AFP

The social network, owned by Elon Musk, is under investigation following accusations of foreign interference.

The social network, owned by Elon Musk, is under investigation following accusations of foreign interference. SOPA IMAGES/SIPA

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Did the X platform (formerly Twitter) deliberately bias its algorithm to the point of distorting democratic debate in France? The cybercrime section of the Paris prosecutor's office has opened a criminal investigation into the social network, owned by Elon Musk , following accusations of foreign interference.

An investigation was entrusted to the gendarmerie on Wednesday concerning the X network, as a legal entity, and against the "natural persons" who run it, Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau indicated this Friday, July 11, in a press release, without citing the name of its multi-billionaire owner, also the boss of Tesla .

This comes after two reports received on January 12, which "reported the alleged use of the X (formerly Twitter) algorithm for foreign interference purposes," the public prosecutor explained.

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The first came from the Macronist MP for Côtes-d'Armor, Eric Bothorel, a specialist in these matters. He alerted the public prosecutor's office to "the recent changes to X's algorithm, as well as the apparent interference in its management since its acquisition by Elon Musk" in 2022.

Content that aims to “bias democratic debate”

He highlighted a "reduction in the diversity of voices and options," a platform that is moving away from a goal of "ensuring a safe and respectful environment for all," a "lack of clarity about the criteria that led to algorithm changes and moderation decisions," as well as "personal interventions by Elon Musk."

In a statement this Friday, Eric Bothorel said he was "very pleased that the French justice system is giving itself the means to fight against this foreign interference." He added: "Democracy is too fragile to let sorcerer's apprentices, owners of digital platforms, tell us what to think, who to vote for, or even who to hate."

According to information from "Le Canard enchaîné" in February, the second report came from a cybersecurity director in the civil service, who was concerned about "a major change in the algorithm used by the X platform which today offers a huge amount of hateful, racist, anti-LGBT+, homophobic political content and which therefore aims to bias the democratic debate in France" .

No (yet) aggravating circumstance of foreign interference

The public prosecutor's office, which confirmed at the beginning of February that it was studying these reports, indicated in its press release on Friday that it had opened this procedure "on the basis of verifications, contributions from French researchers and elements provided by various public institutions" .

The investigation was entrusted to the General Directorate of the National Gendarmerie, and concerns "in particular" the following offences: tampering with the operation of an automated data processing system by an organised gang, as well as fraudulent extraction of data from an automated data processing system by an organised gang.

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At this stage, the criminal qualification mentioned in the press release does not include the aggravating circumstance of foreign interference, provided for by a law promulgated in July 2024, but this may change during the investigation.

The head of X France, Laurent Buanec, assured on January 22 on his social network that "X has strict, clear and public rules aimed at protecting the platform from hate speech" , "fights against disinformation" and that its algorithm "is built in such a way as to avoid offering you hateful content."

X in the EU's sights

Elon Musk regularly comments on domestic and international news on X, and has been accused in recent months of wanting to influence the democratic debate in Great Britain and Germany , where parliamentary elections were held in February.

In late December, Elon Musk said in a message on X that "only the AfD ," the German far-right party, "can save Germany." The comment sparked a stir in Europe. Former European Commissioner for Digital Affairs Thierry Breton called the remark "foreign interference."

French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot urged Brussels in early January to protect EU member states from interference in European public debate. At the European level, the European Commission opened a "formal investigation" into X in December 2023.

The network was formally charged in July 2024 for several alleged violations. For each of these violations, and if it fails to comply, the Commission could impose a fine on Elon Musk of up to 6% of the annual global turnover of all the companies he controls, or several billion euros.

By The New Obs with AFP

Le Nouvel Observateur

Le Nouvel Observateur

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