The coordination between government agencies and tech platforms to censor information represents one of the most significant threats to free speech in the digital age. What began as “content moderation” has evolved into a systematic apparatus for controlling public discourse.
The Twitter Files and Facebook Files revealed extensive coordination between tech companies and government agencies — including the FBI, CDC, and intelligence community — to suppress specific viewpoints, ban accounts, and algorithmically demote content that challenged official narratives on COVID, elections, and foreign policy.
“The same government agencies that are prohibited by the First Amendment from directly censoring speech have found a workaround: using tech platforms as proxy censors, threatening regulation or antitrust action if they don’t comply.”
Google’s search algorithm determines what information billions of people see first. YouTube’s recommendation system shapes what videos go viral. Facebook’s feed controls what news reaches its users. When these systems are calibrated to favor establishment narratives and suppress dissent, they function as instruments of information control.
The tech platforms are not merely private companies making business decisions. They are the public square of the 21st century — and they are being systematically captured by state interests.