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December 2022 Twitter suspensions
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Twitter suspension of journalists
Three journalists suspended on Twitter
Three journalists suspended on Twitter[1]
DateDecember 15, 2022; 2 years ago (2022-12-15)
LocationTwitter
Also known asTwitter journalist purge
TypeAccount suspensions
ThemeTwitter censorship
CauseTwitter Safety policy change
MotiveDoxxing response
TargetJournalists
PerpetratorElon Musk
Organised byElon Musk and Twitter
OutcomeElonJet and 10 journalists suspended including Steven L. Herman, Donie O'Sullivan, Linette Lopez and Keith Olbermann

On December 15, 2022, Twitter suspended the accounts of ten journalists who had covered the company and its owner, Elon Musk. They included reporters Keith Olbermann, Steven L. Herman, and Donie O'Sullivan, as well as journalists from The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, and The Intercept.[2][3][4][5] Musk cited an incident between "a crazy stalker" and a car with his child as a justification for the suspensions.[6] Posters on behalf of the owners of the accounts said that the suspensions were permanent.[2][3][5] On December 16, 2022, Musk said that account access would be restricted for only seven days,[2][3][5] and on December 17, some accounts were reportedly restored, with Musk citing Twitter community polls as the reason for the reversal.[7][8]

Twitter officials initially offered no explanation for their decision.[2] They later said it was due to violations of a new rule, created one day before the bans took place. The policy change prohibited accounts from sharing real-time flight information of private jets.[2][3][9] The bans were allegedly in response to the @ElonJet account, which tracks Musk's private jet. The account and other similar accounts were suspended from Twitter on December 14, 2022, but continued operating on Facebook, Mastodon, and other social media platforms.[3][10][11]

Several of the suspended journalists said they had not violated the rule, and while some had included links to @ElonJet in their articles or reported about the account, it was already suspended at the time of media reports.[2][4][5] The Twitter account of Mastodon, a rival social-media platform, was also suspended on December 15 after linking to @ElonJet on a Mastodon server.[5] Users were unable to share Mastodon links in their tweets[3] and they were labeled as "potentially harmful" and containing "malware".[12][13]

The suspensions drew criticism from various organizations and individuals.[2][14] Some said the actions undermined Musk's repeated claims of supporting free speech on Twitter, while others said Musk had a history of doxxing and harassing people in similar ways, which he was now criticizing.[2][15] The suspensions were condemned by representatives of several countries and organizations, including the United Nations and the European Union.[14][16] EU officials said the actions may have violated the Digital Services Act, which could result in sanctions or even a ban of Twitter in Europe.[4][17] The Government Accountability Project filed a complaint to the United States Congress regarding the suspensions.[18]

Background

[edit]

Business magnate Elon Musk purchased the social media company Twitter for $44 billion on October 27, 2022, after a lengthy process that began when Musk made the initial purchase offer on April 14, 2022, then later rescinded the deal after it was accepted. The company sued Musk to compel him to honor his offer, and although Musk had announced his intent to fight in court, he reversed course.[20][21] Upon acquiring Twitter, Musk fired several top executives,[22] fired half of the workforce,[20] and proposed changes to the platform, such as removal of spambots and open-sourcing Twitter's algorithms.[21]

One of Musk's primary pledges upon acquiring Twitter was promoting free speech, something he has been criticized for failing to do since. He was previously concerned that Twitter was censoring conservative viewpoints, and said the platform would allow all legal speech.[2][14][23] He has described himself as a "free speech absolutist".[14][24] Acting on this conviction, Musk then restored several accounts that were permanently suspended before his purchase, including Donald Trump,[23] whose account @realDonaldTrump had been suspended for tweets that allegedly helped incite the January 6 United States Capitol attack.[25][26]

Before the Twitter account suspensions of December 14 and 15, 2022, Musk shared concerns about the accounts that tracked his jet.[3] Specifically, he criticized the Internet bot account @ElonJet, which used publicly available flight data to track trips taken by Musk's private plane. The account, which was started by a college student named Jack Sweeney,[4][11][10][28] had more than 500,000 followers as of December 2022.[9][11][28] Sweeney also ran a version of the bot on the social networking platform Instagram.[28] In January 2022, before Musk purchased Twitter, he privately offered Sweeney $5,000 to delete the account. Sweeney rejected the offer and asked for $50,000, to which Musk did not agree.[11][23][28] After Musk purchased Twitter, Sweeney cited screenshots provided by a Twitter employee indicating the company limited the reach of the @ElonJet account, though he said those restrictions were later removed.[11][28] In November 2022, Musk publicly said he would not ban @ElonJet, despite claiming the account "is a direct personal safety risk", because of his "commitment to free speech".[14][3][11][28]

Account suspensions

[edit]

Twitter policy changes

[edit]

On December 14, 2022, the social media platform created the new rule that was used to ban accounts publishing the real-time location and movement of private jets.[3] Specifically, Twitter's private information and media policy was modified to include a clause prohibiting the sharing of live location data: "we will remove any tweets or accounts that share someone's live location".[11] The word "jet" does not appear anywhere in the Twitter policy, but according to CNN reporter Donie O'Sullivan the rules "appeared to be designed specifically to justify the removal of the jet-tracking account".[11]

Twitter's official @TwitterSafety account issued messages about the policy change, writing that they would remove tweets that posted live location information and suspend accounts dedicated to doing so. They clarified that users were allowed to share their own live location and the "historical" location of someone else, but "not same-day" information.[10] Musk himself also tweeted about the new policy on December 14.[23][11]

Suspension of flight-tracking accounts

[edit]
@elonjet account suspended on X

The day the new rule was implemented, Twitter suspended the @ElonJet account, as well as the personal account of its creator (@JxckSweeney).[9][11][28] Other similar accounts were also suspended,[9][10] including some that followed the planes of other billionaires such as Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos. Some of these had also been operated by Sweeney,[9][10] who defended himself, telling NBC News: "All I'm doing is taking their data and putting it on Twitter. There's nothing I'm doing wrong, and I didn't mean any harm."[9]

On December 14, Musk said that a car carrying one of his children had been followed by a "crazy stalker (thinking it was me), who later blocked car from moving & climbed onto hood".[2][9][10] In the same tweet, Musk said he would take legal action against Sweeney and "organizations who supported harm to my family" as a result of the alleged altercation.[10][23] Musk publicly posted video footage of a man who he said was the person involved in the incident. The man in the video was also using his smartphone to record whoever was filming him, and Musk included the man's license plate in the video clip, asking his followers if anyone recognized him.[2] The South Pasadena police were called to the scene, but no report had been filed.[2] They found no link to suggest the ElonJet account had contributed to the confrontation.[30] The department believes the suspect is a member of Musk's security team.[31]

Suspension of journalist accounts

[edit]

On December 15, 2022, the social networking service Twitter suspended the accounts of several journalists who routinely reported on the platform and Musk, including:[2][3][4][5]

Journalist Twitter Handle Organization
Matt Binder @mattbinder Mashable
Drew Harwell @drewharwell The Washington Post
Steven L. Herman @W7VOA Voice of America
Micah Lee @micahflee The Intercept
Ryan Mac @rmac18 The New York Times
Donie O'Sullivan @donie CNN
Linette Lopez @lopezlinette Business Insider
Keith Olbermann @keitholbermann Countdown with Keith Olbermann
Aaron Rupar @atrupar freelance
Tony Webster @webster freelance

Additionally, the Twitter account for Mastodon (@joinmastodon), a competitor of Twitter, was suspended on December 15,[3][5] and users were unable to post any links to some of the most popular Mastodon servers in their tweets.[3] Twitter did not initially say why the Mastodon account was suspended or if specific rules had been broken, but earlier in the day, it linked to one of Sweeney's ElonJet accounts hosted on the Mastodon platform.[23] Although Mastodon's account was suspended and its links were blocked, the term "Mastodon" was a trending topic after the changes.[3] It was not initially clear if the ban would be permanent, but Musk later clarified that the suspension would last seven days.[2][3][5] Other journalist accounts were also suspended after December 15. Susan Li (@SusanLiTV), a television journalist with Fox Business Network, was suspended on December 16 after posting a link to an aircraft tracking website in an attempt to demonstrate the ease with which Musk's jet could be tracked using public data.[17] The account of Washington Post reporter Taylor Lorenz (@TaylorLorenz) was suspended on December 17 for "prior doxxing action", but was quickly restored.[32][33]

Explanation from Twitter and Musk

[edit]

Musk publicly responded to the journalist suspensions a few hours after they occurred.[2] He said the accounts were suspended for doxxing,[2][3] specifically in violation of Twitter's new rule banning accounts that track the location and movement of private jets. That new rule was created on December 14, 2022, the day before the journalist accounts were suspended, in response to accounts that provided information about Musk's private jet.[3][9] Musk said the suspended accounts posted his "exact real-time location, basically assassination coordinates, in (obvious) direct violation of Twitter terms of service".[2][24][3]

Musk defended his actions in a series of tweets. In one, he wrote: "Same doxxing rules apply to 'journalists' as to everyone else".[2] In another, he wrote: "Criticizing me all day long is totally fine, but doxxing my real-time location and endangering my family is not."[3][5] Ella Irwin, Twitter's head of trust and safety, told Reuters that the organization manually reviewed "any and all accounts" in violation of the policy, which included posting links to @ElonJet. She said: "I understand that the focus seems to be mainly on journalist accounts but we applied the policy equally to journalists and non-journalist accounts today."[14]

A few hours after the suspensions, Musk defended the action during a discussion on Twitter Spaces, a social audio feature of the platform, which was hosted by BuzzFeed reporter Katie Notopoulos and had more than 30,000 listeners. Several of the suspended journalists as well as the creator of the @ElonJet account participated, and were able to join due to a bug that allowed suspended accounts to join Twitter Spaces. During the conversation, Musk repeatedly said, "You doxx, you get suspended. End of story. That's it."[14][3][4] Drew Harwell, one of the suspended journalists, was able to dialogue with Musk about the suspensions briefly, but Musk left the chat a few minutes after joining, and the Twitter Spaces service was abruptly shut down, disconnecting all the users in Notopoulos's space. Musk later said Twitter Spaces was temporarily unavailable due to a "legacy bug" and that it "should be working tomorrow".[3] The Twitter Spaces feature remained offline for several hours, although several users, including the conversation's host, found themselves suspended from the service once it became available again.[38]

Following the Mastodon account suspension and ban on sending Mastodon links,[12] a new policy was introduced on December 18 that prohibited sharing of links to a variety of social media sites, including Facebook and Instagram, along with Mastodon. The new Twitter policy would have disallowed such links in tweets and on account profiles, and would trigger suspensions of accounts in violation of this rule.[39][40][41] By December 19, Twitter's new linking policy and official mentions about it had been removed,[42][43] and Musk later said that banning users for posting Mastodon links was a mistake.[44]

Reinstatement of some accounts

[edit]

On December 15, Musk issued a Twitter poll asking when the suspensions should be lifted. Musk had previously made a similar poll where the majority had voted to reinstate Trump's account, with Musk saying, "The people have spoken... Vox Populi, Vox Dei".[23] But Forbes wrote that it is unclear whether these unscientific polls truly inform or influence Musk.[23] Musk's poll had four options, and while a majority voted for 7 days or longer, a plurality (43%) voted for immediate reinstatement. Musk then wrote in a response tweet, "Sorry too many options. Will redo poll", and issued a new poll.[23] The second poll asked users whether he should "unsuspend accounts who doxxed my exact location in real-time", and provided only two options "Now" or "In 7 days". The final result was "Now",[17][15] with about 59 percent choosing that option.[17][47]

On December 17, Musk said he would reinstate most of the suspended accounts,[17][8] writing of the poll results, "The people have spoken".[17] But some accounts were not restored. Linette Lopez, who had published investigations into Tesla, Inc., where Musk was CEO, remained suspended on Twitter and had not heard anything from the platform about possible reinstatement.[17][47] Several of the journalists said account restoration appeared to be contingent on the voluntary deletion of specific posts. Drew Harwell was told his account would be restored if he deleted tweets on the suspension of Mastodon's account.[17][8] Steven L. Herman said his account is now visible to others, but he cannot use it because he won't delete three tweets that Twitter claimed were sharing Musk's location. Herman said: "I am in a new level of purgatory. I do not believe anything I have tweeted violate any reasonable standard of any social media platform."[47] Micah Lee also said that, while his account was technically reinstated, he was still locked out unless he agreed to delete some of his past tweets. Lee called the claim that his suspension was lifted "an illusion".[48]

Responses

[edit]

Suspended journalists

[edit]

The journalists were not initially told if their accounts had been permanently or temporarily suspended, and not informed why they had been blocked or what specific rule was violated.[2][24][4] Immediately after the suspension, Rupar said he was given no information about why the action occurred,[2][4] saying he hadn't "been given a reason, explanation, or been looped in about any possible duration."[2] Rupar added that he "didn't post anything remotely controversial today or anytime recently".[2] Micah Lee also said he was not given a reason for the suspension, but said it came shortly after he posted on Twitter about Mastodon's account suspension.[24] Lee also wrote: "While my reporting may not have provided the direct impetus for my suspension, it's clear Musk was taking aim specifically at journalists who have covered him critically."[24] Olbermann's suspension occurred shortly after he had criticized the suspension of other journalists.[2] Rupar's suspension came one day after he had shared a Substack article by Noah Berlatsky that was critical of Musk, "Elon Musk's reactionary populism".[5][49] After Musk's explanation about the suspensions, Rupar said he had not posted anything that violated the policy about disclosing locations, and had never posted anything about @ElonJet prior to his suspension, adding: "Unless the policy is that you criticize Elon and you get suspended."[5]

Some of the suspended journalists had written stories about Musk suspending @ElonJet,[4] though others had not. Matt Binder said he did not share any location data or links to jet-tracking accounts, and was suspended immediately after sharing a screenshot that Donie O'Sullivan posted before his own suspension. Binder said, "I have been highly critical of Musk but never broke any of Twitter's listed policies."[47] Linette Lopez said of her suspension: "Its funny that Elon suddenly has a problem with doxxing and harassing people because he [also] has a history of doing that".[15] Harwell said he did not share information about Musk's private jet or personal location, but simply posted a link to the @ElonJet account in his stories.[14][4] In a direct conversation with Musk on Twitter Spaces, Harwell said: "We have to acknowledge you are using the same exact link-blocking technique that you have criticized as part of the Hunter Biden–New York Post story in 2020."[24][4] In an interview with CNN, Harwell said: "Elon says he is a free speech champion and he is banning journalists for exercising free speech. I think that calls into question his commitment."[5]

Other commentators

[edit]

New York Times external communications director Charlie Stadtlander said the suspensions were "questionable and unfortunate" and that neither the organization nor Times journalist Ryan Mac was given an adequate explanation for the decision to suspend the accounts.[1] Washington Post Executive Editor Sally Buzbee said the suspensions occurred "without warning, process, or explanation" and that they "directly undermined Elon Musk's claim that he intends to run Twitter as a platform dedicated to free speech".[50] CNN said that Musk's actions were "impulsive and unjustified" but "not surprising", and that it would reevaluate its relationship with Twitter. The CNN statement also said: "Twitter's increasing instability and volatility should be of incredible concern for everyone who uses Twitter."[47] Oliver Darcy, a CNN reporter, wrote that Musk's allegations of doxxing were "not what those journalists did".[2] Cybersecurity writer Brian Krebs said Twitter's claim that Mastodon links might have malware was a "bald-faced lie".[47] Lou Paskalis, a media executive, said the suspensions could create uncertainty among news organizations and advertisers. Paskalis said the bans were "the biggest self-inflicted wound I can think of".[47]

Commentators have been critical of the suspensions, including media outlets and international representatives,[2][14] officials from several countries, the United Nations and European Union.[14] Many critics said the actions undermined Musk's claims of supporting free speech.[2] The suspensions were labeled by Alex Stamos, a security researcher, and Micah Lee from The Intercept, the "Thursday Night Massacre".[24][7][4][14]

Avatar of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Avatar of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Twitter
@AOC

You're a public figure. An extremely controversial and powerful one.

I get feeling unsafe, but descending into abuse of power + erratically banning journalists only increases the intensity around you.

Take a beat and lay off the proto-fascism. Maybe try putting down your phone.

December 16, 2022[51]

Avatar of Elon Musk
Avatar of Elon Musk
Elon Musk Twitter
@elonmusk

They posted my exact real-time location, basically assassination coordinates, in (obvious) direct violation of Twitter terms of service

December 16, 2022[52]

United Nations spokeswoman Melissa Fleming said she was disturbed by the bans and that "media freedom is not a toy".[14] Stephane Dujarric, another UN spokesperson, said they were reconsidering their involvement with Twitter, and that the suspensions set "a dangerous precedent at a time when journalists all over the world are facing censorship, physical threats and even worse".[47] U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote public tweets directly to Musk, saying the suspensions were irresponsible and only increased the scrutiny around him, adding that he should "lay off the proto-fascism."[53] Věra Jourová, the Vice-President of the European Commission for Values and Transparency, said on December 16 that "news about arbitrary suspension of journalists on Twitter is worrying."[4]

European Commission officials said Musk's actions may have violated the Digital Services Act, which could result in sanctions or even a ban on the social media platform across all of Europe.[4][17] Johannes Bahrke, of the European Commission, said it was encouraging that some journalists were reinstated, but was concerned about Musk using informal Twitter polls to make such decisions rather than through a clearly defined framework.[17]

Roland Lescure, the French Minister of Commerce, ceased all of his Twitter activity in protest.[14] The German Foreign Office warned that the suspensions jeopardize press freedom.[14] The Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing said Twitter's actions "violate the spirit of the First Amendment and the principle that social media platforms will allow the unfiltered distribution of information that is already in the public square".[14]

Bari Weiss, who worked with Musk to publish the Twitter Files, disagreed and argued with Musk on Twitter about his decision, saying, "the old regime at Twitter [was] governed by its own whims and biases...[and] it sure looks like the new regime has the same problem".[47][54][55] On December 16, Wired reporter Amanda Hoover quoted John Davisson, a senior counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, saying, "Musk is responding to events that affect him personally to reshape that policy and place new limits on what could be disseminated through the platform".[56] Hoover concluded, "This new approach will have a lasting impact on Twitter."[56]

The Government Accountability Project, a whistleblower protection and advocacy organization, filed a complaint to the United States Congress on December 22, saying Musk "abused his authority by acting arbitrarily and capriciously" in suspending the journalists. David Seide, senior counsel with the organization, called the actions "disturbing" and urged Congress to "review this mistreatment" and investigate further.[18] Brendan Carr, an FCC commissioner, said that "one person should not get to decide who participates in the digital town square".[4]

See also

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References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
The December 2022 Twitter suspensions encompassed the permanent banning of accounts disseminating real-time location data of private jets, including @ElonJet which tracked Elon Musk's aircraft using public flight tracking information, followed by temporary suspensions of numerous journalists' accounts for referencing or linking to such data, all under a newly implemented policy against doxxing to safeguard physical security. On December 14, 2022, Twitter enacted the suspensions of @ElonJet and similar trackers after Musk cited a recent stalker incident involving his son, where publicly available flight data facilitated the threat, tweeting that "any account doxxing real-time location info of anyone will be suspended, as it is a physical safety violation," explicitly including links to external sites with such information. The following day, December 15, accounts of journalists such as Ryan Mac of The New York Times, Drew Harwell of The Washington Post, Donie O'Sullivan of CNN, and others including independent reporters Aaron Rupar and Keith Olbermann were suspended without prior notice, as Musk asserted they had shared his "exact real-time location, basically assassination coordinates" through posts about the jet trackers. These actions sparked significant controversy, with critics decrying them as retaliatory censorship against Musk's coverage amid his platform overhaul, while proponents viewed the policy as a necessary evolution in content moderation to deter real-world harms from location doxxing, applicable equally to all users including journalists. Most journalist accounts were reinstated within days after appeals, though Musk emphasized consistent enforcement of the doxxing rules regardless of profession, highlighting tensions between free expression and safety protocols on the platform then undergoing rapid changes post-Musk's acquisition.

Historical Context

Pre-Musk Twitter Moderation and Biases

Prior to Elon Musk's acquisition of Twitter in October 2022, the platform's content moderation under CEO Jack Dorsey prioritized certain ideological perspectives, with empirical evidence indicating disproportionate restrictions on conservative and right-leaning expression. Internal practices included manual interventions and algorithmic adjustments that limited visibility for dissenting voices, often justified under broad policies against "misinformation" or "harmful content," but applied selectively to suppress narratives challenging progressive consensus. This approach contrasted with more permissive handling of left-leaning content, fostering perceptions of systemic bias rooted in the company's leadership and employee demographics, which skewed heavily toward liberal viewpoints. A prominent example occurred on October 14, 2020, when Twitter blocked users from sharing links to a New York Post article detailing emails from Hunter Biden's laptop suggesting influence peddling by his father, then-candidate Joe Biden; the platform cited its policy on hacked materials, despite lacking evidence of hacking and internal acknowledgments that the restriction was a mistake. Former executives later conceded the error in congressional testimony, noting it stemmed from precautionary overreach amid election-year pressures, including FBI warnings about potential foreign disinformation—warnings that proved unfounded for this story. This incident reduced the article's reach by millions of impressions, highlighting how policy enforcement could prioritize caution on right-leaning scandals over open discourse. Revelations from the Twitter Files, comprising internal emails and documents released post-acquisition, exposed tools like "visibility filtering" and "search blacklists" used to shadowban or de-amplify conservative accounts, including those of Trump supporters and lockdown skeptics such as Stanford epidemiologist Jay Bhattacharya, whose COVID policy critiques were restricted from trending. These mechanisms, including "Do Not Amplify" labels, reduced tweet impressions without user notification, affecting right-wing users more frequently than others, as documented in analyses of moderation logs. While a 2021 internal study found algorithmic timelines amplifying Republican politicians' content over Democrats', manual overrides and trend suppression targeted specific conservative narratives, enabling biased curation under the guise of combating abuse. Twitter's enforcement of harassment and doxxing rules further illustrated selective rigor, with lax responses to posts targeting conservative figures—such as the 2018 dissemination of Fox News host Tucker Carlson's home address, which prompted real-world threats but no account suspensions—contrasted against swift deplatforming of right-leaning users for analogous or lesser infractions. Policies prohibiting private information sharing were inconsistently applied, permitting doxxing of public conservatives while aggressively pursuing "hate speech" from the right, as evidenced by higher suspension rates for right-wing accounts in pre-2022 audits. This disparity underscored a moderation framework that tolerated threats against ideological opponents but curtailed challenges to dominant narratives, contributing to eroded trust among conservative users.

Elon Musk's Acquisition and Initial Reforms

Elon Musk announced his intent to acquire Twitter on April 14, 2022, offering $54.20 per share in a deal valuing the company at approximately $44 billion. Twitter's board accepted the offer on April 25, 2022, following a period of negotiations and legal proceedings, including Musk's brief attempt to back out before recommitting. The acquisition closed on October 27, 2022, after which Musk took over as CEO and owner. Musk's motivations centered on promoting free speech, describing Twitter as the "digital town square" essential to democracy and criticizing prior management for excessive censorship that stifled open discourse. He argued that the platform had deviated from neutrality, influenced by internal biases that prioritized certain viewpoints over others, and pledged to restore it as a venue for authentic public conversation while combating spam and bots. This perspective framed Twitter not merely as a private company but as a utility-like infrastructure requiring viewpoint neutrality to fulfill its societal role. Upon assuming control, Musk implemented swift reforms, including the dismissal of top executives such as CEO Parag Agrawal, CFO Ned Segal, and legal chief Vijaya Gadde on October 27, 2022, many of whom oversaw prior content moderation policies. These actions signaled a break from established practices, targeting leadership associated with what Musk viewed as overreach in suppressing dissenting voices. In November 2022, Musk reinstated accounts previously banned under the old regime, notably Donald Trump's on November 19 following a user poll, exemplifying a pivot toward reduced permanent suspensions and greater tolerance for controversial speech. Such moves underscored commitments to algorithmic transparency and policy reforms aimed at minimizing ideological enforcement.

Policy Updates

New Anti-Doxxing and Location-Sharing Rules

On December 14, 2022, Twitter updated its Private Information and Media policy to explicitly prohibit users from sharing another individual's live location information, categorizing such actions as doxxing and a violation warranting account suspension. The revision targeted content revealing real-time positions, including links to external live trackers or derived data, with the platform stating that dedicated accounts promoting such information would face permanent bans due to the elevated risk of physical harm to targeted individuals. The policy encompassed location data obtained from publicly accessible sources, such as Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) signals used in aviation tracking, which planes transmit openly for navigational purposes but which, when aggregated and shared in real time online, could enable stalking, harassment, or coordinated threats against high-profile persons. Exceptions were carved out for sharing one's own live location or historical (non-same-day) data, as well as public event locations like concerts, but the core prohibition applied broadly to prevent misuse of verifiable public signals for immediate endangerment. This represented a departure from pre-acquisition norms, under which Twitter had permitted the operation of numerous accounts disseminating real-time location data from public ADS-B feeds since at least 2020, without systematic enforcement against such sharing despite analogous safety concerns for various public figures. The update prioritized causal risks from real-time dissemination—such as facilitating interception or attacks—over prior tolerance, applying uniformly irrespective of the subject's political alignment or public status.

Enforcement Rationale Tied to Physical Safety

The suspensions under Twitter's updated doxxing policy were rationalized as necessary to mitigate physical safety risks posed by real-time location disclosures. Elon Musk articulated that publishing live location data, such as private jet trajectories, enables potential physical harm by allowing adversaries to predict and intercept movements, distinguishing it from permissible criticism or historical data analysis. This rationale emphasized that real-time tracking facilitates immediate, coordinated threats—such as stalking or ambush—unfeasible with delayed or aggregated information, thereby crossing into doxxing when weaponized against individuals. Musk specifically invoked family endangerment, stating that doxxing his real-time location was unacceptable despite tolerance for ongoing public critique, amid heightened personal threats following the October 2022 Twitter acquisition. Accounts like @ElonJet relied on ADS-B signals, which broadcast unencrypted aircraft positions primarily for aviation safety—enabling collision avoidance and air traffic coordination—not for public surveillance of private itineraries. Misapplication of this data for live personal tracking had previously led to unwanted confrontations, amplifying risks for executives and billionaires subject to obsessive harassment. From a causal standpoint, even publicly sourced real-time data becomes a vector for harm when centralized and disseminated on platforms, enabling bad actors to exploit timing for physical interventions rather than mere reputational damage. Musk's enforcement aligned with this logic, prioritizing prevention of verifiable dangers over abstract transparency claims, particularly given documented stalker incidents tied to such tracking.

Account Suspensions

Suspension of Flight-Tracking Accounts

On December 14, 2022, Twitter suspended the @ElonJet account, which provided real-time tracking of Elon Musk's private jet using automated feeds from publicly available Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) data. The account, operated by college student Jack Sweeney, had amassed over 1 million followers by posting updates on the jet's location derived from transponder signals received by ground stations and shared via platforms like ADS-B Exchange. In conjunction with the @ElonJet suspension, Twitter actioned more than 25 additional accounts that similarly tracked private flights of billionaires, government officials, and other prominent figures, including those associated with the Biden administration. These accounts relied on the same ADS-B methodology, aggregating unencrypted aircraft position data broadcast for air traffic control purposes to generate live maps and alerts of aircraft movements. The suspensions followed Musk's expressed concerns over preceding months regarding the potential risks to his family's physical safety posed by such real-time disclosures, including instances where he highlighted threats to his young son from publicly shared location information. The affected accounts were deemed to violate Twitter's updated policy against sharing live location data, with enforcement applied uniformly to automated tracking services irrespective of the public sourcing of the underlying ADS-B signals. Prior to the suspensions, Musk had publicly warned that disseminating such information constituted a safety hazard equivalent to providing "assassination coordinates," prompting preemptive discussions on restricting access to sensitive flight telemetry.

Suspension of Journalist Accounts

On December 15, 2022, Twitter suspended the accounts of several journalists for allegedly violating its doxxing policy by sharing or promoting real-time location data related to Elon Musk's private jet. The platform's enforcement targeted accounts that had posted links to or discussed the @ElonJet tracking service, which broadcasted Musk's flight paths using publicly available ADS-B data. These actions were framed by Twitter as consistent application of rules prohibiting the dissemination of personal location information that could endanger physical safety. Among the suspended accounts were those belonging to Ryan Mac of The New York Times, who had reported on the @ElonJet suspension and shared related flight-tracking details; Drew Harwell of The Washington Post, who tweeted about the tracker's coverage of Musk's movements; and Donie O'Sullivan of CNN, whose posts included references to the jet-tracking controversy. Additional high-profile suspensions included Matt Binder of Mashable, Aaron Rupar (an independent journalist), and Steve Herman of Voice of America, each of whom had amplified or linked to @ElonJet's real-time coordinates or critiqued the initial tracker ban in threads that recirculated location specifics. The suspensions occurred without prior notice, affecting roughly six to eight accounts in total, as part of a broader crackdown on doxxing following the @ElonJet deactivation earlier that day. The precise violations centered on the journalists' dissemination of geolocation data, such as latitude and longitude coordinates derived from aircraft transponders, which Twitter deemed a breach equivalent to that of non-journalist accounts. For instance, Harwell's suspension followed his social media posts linking to articles and tweets that included live flight paths, while Mac's account was taken down after he highlighted the public nature of the data in coverage of Musk's safety concerns. This enforcement underscored Twitter's stance that professional status did not exempt users from location-sharing prohibitions, with Musk publicly stating that "same doxxing rules apply to 'journalists' as to everyone else." In addition to the @ElonJet account, Twitter suspended approximately 30 other accounts on December 14, 2022, that disseminated real-time flight tracking data derived from public sources, targeting the private jets of billionaires, celebrities, tech executives, and government agencies. These included trackers operated by Jack Sweeney, whose personal Twitter account and additional jet-monitoring profiles for various high-profile individuals were also banned on the same date. The suspensions encompassed accounts monitoring flights associated with figures across political spectrums, such as government officials, thereby demonstrating uniform application of the doxxing policy rather than selective enforcement against Musk critics. No verified instances of temporary bans for mere amplification of such content by non-journalist users emerged from contemporaneous reports, though permanent restrictions aligned with the platform's updated rules prohibiting live location sharing.

Justifications and Internal Explanations

Elon Musk's Public Statements

On December 15, 2022, Elon Musk posted on Twitter: "Any account doxxing real-time location info of anyone will be suspended, as it is a physical safety violation. This includes posting links to that info." He framed the suspensions, including that of the @ElonJet account tracking his private jet movements, as necessary to mitigate risks of physical harm from publicly sharing precise, real-time geolocation data. Musk highlighted the policy's universality by applying it to accounts targeting himself, underscoring that the measure protected against potential escalation to threats regardless of the subject's identity. Following the suspension of several journalists' accounts on December 16, 2022, Musk clarified that the enforcement was not targeted censorship but consistent rule application, stating: "Same doxxing rules apply to 'journalists' as to everyone else." He distinguished between permissible criticism and safety violations, adding: "Criticizing me all day long is totally fine, but doxxing my real-time location and endangering my family is not." These statements positioned the actions as neutral safeguards against doxxing's inherent dangers, rather than partisan suppression, with Musk conducting user polls to gauge support for temporary seven-day bans as a transparent enforcement mechanism.

Alignment with Broader Platform Safety Policies

The suspensions in December 2022 implemented Twitter's revised Private Information policy, which explicitly banned sharing live location data of individuals without consent, classifying such actions as doxxing that endangers physical safety. This update on December 14, 2022, extended existing prohibitions on publishing private details like addresses or contact information, but targeted real-time tracking—such as links to flight paths or geolocation services—to curb immediate risks of harm, with violations triggering account suspensions. The policy framed doxxing not merely as privacy intrusion but as a direct precursor to targeted harassment or violence, integrating it into Twitter's overarching abuse and harassment framework that prohibits incitement or facilitation of harm. These measures responded to post-acquisition dynamics, where the platform's ownership change amplified scrutiny on executives and public figures, heightening incentives for adversarial location sharing amid documented threats. Unlike pre-acquisition enforcement, which often permitted public aggregation of flight data without intervention despite potential for real-world exploitation, the updated rules prioritized causal prevention of platform-enabled targeting by mandating removal of offending content and accounts. Official statements underscored this as a safety imperative, applying uniformly to "anyone" rather than selectively, to deter coordinated efforts that could escalate from digital exposure to offline peril. The alignment reinforced Twitter's safety evolution by embedding doxxing enforcement within automated and manual moderation processes aimed at reducing vectors for physical threats, distinct from broader content moderation debates. This framework update addressed empirical gaps in prior laxity, where unchecked real-time data dissemination had normalized exposure without recourse, now countered through policy-driven suspensions to safeguard against verifiable harm pathways like stalking or ambush risks.

Reinstatements and Resolutions

User Polls and Decision-Making Process

On December 17, 2022, Elon Musk posted a Twitter poll inquiring whether the accounts of suspended journalists should be reinstated immediately or delayed for seven days, framing it as a direct appeal to user input amid ongoing controversy over the suspensions. The poll received approximately 3.7 million votes, with 58.7% favoring immediate reinstatement and 41.3% opting for the delay. Musk subsequently announced compliance with the majority outcome, stating "The people have spoken" in reference to the poll results, which demonstrated over 50% public support for prompt reversal of the bans. This approach highlighted Musk's reliance on platform polls as a tool for crowd-sourced decision-making in content moderation, positioning user votes as a form of empirical validation for enforcement actions. The polling mechanism, conducted during heightened backlash following the December 15-16 suspensions, expedited the review process by aggregating user preferences in real time, with the majority favoring balanced enforcement over prolonged restrictions. This instance underscored an experimental shift toward direct democracy elements in platform governance, where poll outcomes directly informed policy application without intermediary layers.

Specific Account Restorations and Ongoing Restrictions

On December 17, 2022, following a Twitter poll initiated by Elon Musk that garnered over 3.7 million votes with 58.7% favoring immediate reinstatement, several journalist accounts suspended two days earlier were restored. These included accounts belonging to Ryan Mac of The New York Times, Drew Harwell of The Washington Post, and Donie O'Sullivan of CNN, among others previously targeted for alleged doxxing related to location tracking. The restorations occurred without formal appeals processes or explicit conditions stated by Twitter, though Musk indicated alignment with the platform's updated doxxing policy prohibiting live location sharing of private individuals. Certain accounts, however, faced prolonged or permanent suspensions despite the poll outcome. Keith Olbermann's account, suspended on December 15, 2022, for promoting content linked to suspended journalists, remained inactive and was not restored as part of the December 17 wave. Similarly, Linette Lopez's account was initially excluded from reinstatements, with reports indicating it stayed suspended into late December. By December 22, 2022, advocacy groups documented intermittent access issues for some reinstated accounts, including temporary locks or further restrictions for perceived rule violations, though most affected journalists reported full functionality shortly after restoration. Restored accounts operated under Twitter's general rules against doxxing and harassment, with no unique ongoing restrictions publicly detailed beyond standard moderation. Instances of re-suspension occurred sporadically; for example, some users noted brief deactivations tied to new posts, but these were resolved without permanent bans in the majority of cases by year's end.

Reactions and Debates

Criticisms from Suspended Parties and Mainstream Media

Suspended journalists accused Elon Musk of hypocrisy and authoritarianism for enforcing doxxing policies selectively against critics, framing the sharing of flight-tracking links as protected journalistic activity rather than a safety violation. Accounts belonging to reporters from The New York Times, The Washington Post, CNN, and others were suspended on December 15, 2022, after they posted or referenced real-time location data similar to that previously banned for private jet tracking. These individuals contended that public ADS-B data, which broadcasts aircraft positions openly, did not equate to doxxing and posed no genuine risk, dismissing concerns over potential real-world harm as exaggerated. Mainstream media coverage portrayed the suspensions as retaliation for scrutiny of Musk's leadership, with outlets like NPR highlighting criticisms from press freedom advocates who labeled the actions a direct threat to independent reporting on powerful figures. The Guardian reported similar sentiments, quoting UN officials who warned that the moves established a "dangerous precedent" by conflating public-interest journalism with prohibited doxxing, thereby undermining freedom of expression. Associated Press analyses noted the widening rift between Twitter and media organizations, emphasizing claims that the policy's application ignored the universality of doxxing rules previously applied to non-journalistic accounts. Critics within these circles argued that such enforcement chilled coverage of public figures' movements, prioritizing personal security narratives over transparency.

Defenses from Free Speech Proponents and Safety Advocates

Free speech proponents argued that the suspensions enforced a neutral policy against doxxing, which involves revealing real-time personal location data and poses physical safety risks rather than constituting protected political speech. Conservative commentator Christopher Rufo supported the measure, stating that "doxxing should be prohibited" and deeming a seven-day suspension for the first offense reasonable, emphasizing consistency over selective application. Safety advocates underscored the empirical dangers of such tracking, citing Elon Musk's assertion that publicizing his jet's location endangered his family, including an instance where it placed his son at risk during travel. They contended that doxxing facilitates real-world harm, such as stalking or violence, by enabling assailants to predict and intercept targets, thereby justifying platform interventions to prevent foreseeable threats irrespective of the subject's prominence. Proponents further maintained that uniform enforcement of anti-doxxing rules safeguards all users, including public figures, from asymmetric vulnerabilities where high-visibility individuals face amplified risks from publicized itineraries. This approach aligns with broader platform safety standards that prioritize causal prevention of harm over unfettered disclosure of publicly sourced but potentially weaponizable data.

Comparisons to Prior Twitter Suppression Practices

Prior to Elon Musk's acquisition of Twitter in October 2022, the platform under CEO Jack Dorsey routinely implemented permanent suspensions for content violating policies on incitement, election integrity, or misinformation, often through opaque internal processes lacking public transparency or reversal mechanisms. A prominent example occurred on January 8, 2021, when Twitter permanently banned President Donald Trump's @realDonaldTrump account, citing "the risk of further incitement of violence" in the wake of the January 6 Capitol riot, with no contemporaneous user polls, appeals yielding reinstatement, or provisions for future review. This contrasted sharply with the December 2022 suspensions, which targeted alleged doxxing of private location data and incorporated explicit public polling for potential reinstatements, leading to restorations for several accounts within days or weeks. Similarly, during the 2020-2021 COVID-19 pandemic, Twitter enforced stringent rules against perceived misinformation, resulting in suspensions of accounts expressing skepticism toward official narratives on vaccines, lockdowns, or transmission risks, frequently without avenues for rapid appeal or reversal. For instance, in November 2020, the platform permanently banned British conspiracy theorist David Icke for repeatedly violating COVID-19 misinformation policies, a decision upheld without public input or subsequent mitigation under Dorsey's leadership. Another case involved independent journalist Alex Berenson, whose account was suspended in August 2021 for tweets challenging vaccine efficacy claims, remaining offline until Musk's reinstatement in December 2022. These actions prioritized content moderation aligned with prevailing institutional consensus over procedural accountability, differing from the 2022 events' emphasis on verifiable safety harms like real-time location sharing rather than broadly interpretive "misinformation." Empirically, pre-Musk Twitter suppressed far greater volumes of dissenting speech, with internal practices censoring millions of tweets and thousands of accounts annually for viewpoint-based violations, as later documented in leaked communications revealing algorithmic deboosting and blacklists targeting conservative or contrarian users. In causal terms, Dorsey-era enforcement fostered systemic viewpoint discrimination—evident in the October 2020 throttling of the New York Post's Hunter Biden laptop story as "hacked materials"—without the reversible, poll-driven transparency of 2022, which ultimately expanded platform diversity by enabling user-driven resolutions rather than entrenching permanent exclusions. This disparity underscores how prior practices amplified opacity and ideological conformity, while 2022 measures, though criticized, introduced empirical checks promoting accountability.

Broader Impacts

Effects on Platform Moderation Evolution

The December 2022 suspensions exemplified X's (formerly Twitter) evolving moderation framework, emphasizing enforcement against doxxing—defined as sharing private real-time location data—while signaling a broader pivot toward user-driven fact-checking and reduced reliance on permanent bans for viewpoint-based violations. Following the event, X maintained and enforced its doxxing policy, suspending accounts that violated rules against disclosing individuals' live locations without consent, a stance that persisted through 2023 and into 2024 as evidenced by ongoing transparency disclosures. This incident reinforced safety boundaries around personal targeting, even amid criticisms of selective application, contributing to a policy landscape where such actions were decoupled from ideological content disputes. In parallel, the suspensions accelerated the platform's investment in Community Notes, a crowdsourced annotation system launched pre-acquisition but significantly expanded post-2022 to counter misinformation without top-down censorship. By 2023, note contributions grew substantially, with millions of users participating to contextualize posts, positioning it as a core alternative to pre-Musk era trust-and-safety teams focused on proactive removals. This shift aligned with a de-emphasis on ideological moderation, as X reduced permanent suspensions for categories like hateful conduct, dropping from higher pre-2022 levels to fewer actions in 2024—e.g., far fewer users suspended for such violations in the first half of 2024 compared to 2022 reports. Transparency reports further illustrate moderation evolution tied to these changes, showing a 19% decline in post removals for abuse and harassment in the second half of 2024 relative to prior periods, alongside fewer overall enforcement actions for non-safety violations. While user reports of harassment remained a top category (36.5% in early 2024 data), the lower removal rates suggest effective deterrence from doxxing-focused precedents and a recalibration toward free speech tolerances, with permanent bans reserved primarily for spam, child exploitation, and direct threats rather than subjective ideological harms. This post-suspension trajectory marked a causal pivot from legacy practices, prioritizing scalable, transparent mechanisms over opaque, bias-prone interventions.

Influence on Public Discourse and Trust in Social Media

The December 2022 suspensions highlighted the physical safety risks posed by real-time location doxxing, as Musk emphasized that sharing his jet's coordinates via public data endangered his family, prompting a reevaluation of what constitutes acceptable "transparency" on social platforms. This enforcement challenged media outlets' tendency to normalize such tracking as public-interest journalism, redirecting discourse toward causal links between online exposure and real-world threats, independent of ideological favoritism. Post-acquisition actions, including these suspensions, correlated with improved perceptions among Republican users, who saw the platform's democratic impact as mostly positive rising from 17% in 2021 to 43% in 2023, while negative views fell from 60% to 21%. Engagement metrics reflected this shift, with contentious actors—frequently free speech advocates—experiencing a 70% increase in retweets and 14% in likes following Musk's takeover. These changes fostered greater retention among conservatives, with only 20% of Republican users anticipating departure within a year, compared to 29% of Democrats, countering pre-Musk echo chambers dominated by left-leaning moderation biases. Over time, the episode contributed to broader platform transformations, including the July 2023 rebranding to X, by underscoring commitments to rule-based enforcement over selective transparency, thereby attracting users disillusioned with prior censorship patterns and enhancing discourse diversity through elevated conservative participation.

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