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French Prosecutors Open Criminal Case Against X Over Alleged Algorithm Manipulation
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French prosecutors have opened a criminal case into X on allegations it altered its algorithms in ways that may have supported “foreign interference.”
Magistrate Laure Beccuau confirmed on Friday that the investigation began Wednesday, with authorities looking into whether X violated French law by manipulating its recommendation systems and deceptively collecting user data.
This latest development builds on a separate inquiry launched in January, which was prompted by complaints from a French parliamentarian and a senior civil servant.
The original accusation targeted X for promoting “an enormous amount of hateful, racist, anti-LGBT+ and homophobic political content, which aims to skew the democratic debate in France.”
X is facing mounting pressure not only from French officials but also from European regulators. On Thursday, two members of France’s National Assembly filed a complaint with Arcom, the national digital watchdog.
At the European level, the Commission has been examining X’s practices for close to two years under the recent censorship law, the Digital Services Act. The focus has included “misinformation” but in January the scope of the investigation widened to include X’s algorithms.
Momentum is building within EU institutions to wrap up that investigation. While regulators cite threats to democratic discourse and online safety, the French government’s move to criminally probe X brings into sharper focus the tension between public oversight and free expression.
These state-led actions, framed as efforts to regulate tech platforms, may well cross the line into political censorship under the cover of legality.
If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.
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