After “The Guardian” yesterday, the Spanish daily “La Vanguardia”, based in Barcelona, ​​announced in turn that it will no longer publish content on X, which has become “a disinformation network”

After “The Guardian” yesterday, the Spanish daily “La Vanguardia”, based in Barcelona, ​​announced in turn that it will no longer publish content on X, which has become “a disinformation network”
After “The Guardian” yesterday, the Spanish daily “La Vanguardia”, based in Barcelona, ​​announced in turn that it will no longer publish content on X, which has become “a disinformation network”

The Spanish daily La Vanguardia, based in Barcelona, ​​announced Thursday that it would no longer publish content on British The Guardian.

“The former Twitter makes messages go viral that violate human rights,” accuses the newspaper in an editorial, in which it emphasizes that it will, however, continue to follow the accounts of personalities, companies or people on the social network. personalities to “be able to punctually inform its readers of messages or debates which may be exchanged or take place there”.

“Managers of the newspaper indicated that they had been worried for a long time because conspiracy theories and contempt for human rights are very present on X. The factor which ultimately decided them to leave the social network was the coverage of the presidential elections in the United States,” the text continues.

At the end of the election which he won on November 5, Donald Trump announced his intention to appoint the boss of 2022– at the head of a commission responsible for cutting public spending, jointly with Republican businessman Vivek Ramaswamy.

“X has been filled since the arrival of Elon Musk with toxic content (…) in an increasingly marked way,” La Vanguardia further criticizes. “This social network has transformed into a platform on which conspiracy theories and disinformation find a sounding board.”

“The growing presence of +bots+ on editor’s note), during which countless +bots+ of Indian origin took part in public debates on this social network”, further underlines the daily.

“This newspaper notes that ideas that violate human rights, such as hatred towards ethnic minorities, misogyny and racism, are part of the viral content that circulates on X, where they go viral and capture users’ time in order to earn more money from ads,” he describes.

Already on Wednesday, The Guardian announced that it was leaving the social network, calling it a “toxic media platform”.

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