On Tuesday, the Trump Administration followed through on a threat of retaliation targeting foreigners who are involved in content moderation. The State Department announced sanctions barring US access for former EU commissioner Thierry Breton, as well as four researchers, while issuing an intentionally chilling threat to others, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio claiming, âThe State Department stands ready and willing to expand todayâs list if other foreign actors do not reverse course.â
One of the researchers the State Department says is banned and now deportable, is Imran Ahmed, who runs the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), an organization aimed at identifying and pushing back against hate speech online that Elon Musk tried and failed to censor with a lawsuit that was dismissed in early 2024. In his decision, Judge Charles Breyer wrote that Xâs motivation for suing was to âpunish CCDH for CCDH publications that criticized X Corp. â and perhaps in order to dissuade others.â
The other researchers include Anna-Lena von Hodenberg and Josephine Ballon, leaders of HateAid, a nonprofit that tried to sue X in 2023 for âfailing to remove criminal antisemitic content,â as well as Clare Melford, leader of the Global Disinformation Index, which works on âfixing the systems that enable disinformation.â
The press release announcing the sanctions is titled âAnnouncement of Actions to Combat the Global Censorship-Industrial Complex,â the claimed target of Republicans like House Judiciary Committee leader Jim Jordan, as theyâve worked against attempts to apply fact-checking and misinformation research to social networks. Earlier this month, Reuters reported the State Department ordered US consulates to consider rejecting H-1B visa applicants involved in content moderation, and a few days ago, the Office of the US Trade Representative threatened retaliation against European tech giants like Spotify and SAP over supposedly âdiscriminatoryâ activity in regulating US tech platforms.
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