Chapter

The Mar-a-Lago Search and Tech Companies' Censorship Policies
The government's search of Mar-a-Lago raises concerns about heavy-handed tactics and lack of transparency. Tech companies like Twitter and Facebook may need to implement policies requiring court orders before censoring content upon government requests.
Clips
The FBI going to Facebook to censor a true story related to the 2020 election that they knew to be true because they had the laptop in their possession is the bombshell, as it should not intervene in elections in that way.
46:31 - 47:22 (00:50)
Summary
The FBI going to Facebook to censor a true story related to the 2020 election that they knew to be true because they had the laptop in their possession is the bombshell, as it should not intervene in elections in that way.
ChapterThe Mar-a-Lago Search and Tech Companies' Censorship Policies
EpisodeE94: NFT volume plummets, California's overreach, FBI meddling, climate change & national security
PodcastAll-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
A discussion about Obama's collection of classified documents and whether or not they pose a threat to national security.
47:22 - 48:38 (01:16)
Summary
A discussion about Obama's collection of classified documents and whether or not they pose a threat to national security. The speaker believes the approach to be heavy handed and argues that there is likely classified material in Trump's possession as well.
ChapterThe Mar-a-Lago Search and Tech Companies' Censorship Policies
EpisodeE94: NFT volume plummets, California's overreach, FBI meddling, climate change & national security
PodcastAll-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
The government should provide court orders when instructing tech companies such as Twitter and Facebook to censor press stories they don't have the authority to censor, as censoring violates the First Amendment.
48:38 - 51:42 (03:03)
Summary
The government should provide court orders when instructing tech companies such as Twitter and Facebook to censor press stories they don't have the authority to censor, as censoring violates the First Amendment. While tech companies drew a hard line with privacy and security in a previous case, a recent event involving a heatwave and drowning highlights that this conversation should matter to a broader audience.