Trump's point that the Kimmel case has overshadowed

BarcelonaGoogle has sent a 28-page letter to the US Congressional Judiciary Committee announcing that it will reinstate YouTube accounts that were removed during the pandemic for spreading disinformation about COVID-19. Amid the storm over Jimmy Kimmel's continuity, the news has gone relatively unnoticed, although it's a three-pointer from midfield by Trump that once again demonstrates his success in bringing Big Tech—which until four days ago were seen as perfidious agents of progressivism—to his feet. It's enough to know that the chief disinformation expert, Elon Musk, had only two words to comment on the news: well done.

Google takes the opportunity in its text to disavow Biden, whom it says exerted "misguided and unacceptable" pressure to force them to modify their (tenuous, very tenuous) moderation policy. It's certainly bad news that the executive branch is secretly interfering in these supposed spaces for exchange. But at least Biden did so loaded with arguments and with public health—another fundamental right—on the horizon, while the country's corpses numbered in the hundreds of thousands. And he got bogged down in an ugly maneuver because tech companies have long decided that the criteria of the general good are secondary to the only yardstick that matters to them: profit. They invoke freedom of expression only as a hypocritical excuse to refrain from moderating the sepsis circulating through their channels. Because sanitizing it would be costly in terms of resources and they would lose the favor of the god ofengagementToxicity hooks and sets the wheels of its dazzling profits turning. Networks need to be regulated, and done so in the open, with political consensus and listening to the opinions of experts, not based on their ability to make noise, but on their authority.