Audio By Carbonatix
The owners of Twitter have been accused of trying to "bully" anti-hate campaigners into silence with letters threatening legal action.
The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) said X Corp accused it of making "troubling and baseless claims" in its reports about the platform.
Elon Musk bought the platform last year promising to defend free speech.
Imran Ahmed, CCDH chief executive, said Mr Musk's actions were "a brazen attempt to silence honest criticism".
Twitter was rebranded as X by Mr Musk just over a week ago.
Since Mr Musk took over Twitter, the platform has been accused - including by former employees - of not doing enough to counter hate-speech and misinformation. Conversely, in December Mr Musk tweeted that hate speech was down by a third.
On Sunday the platform reinstated Kanye West after an almost eight-month ban for a series of offensive tweets - one of which appeared to show a symbol combining a swastika and the Star of David.
In the letter to the CCDH, X Corp lawyer Alex Spiro rejected the campaign group's allegations that Twitter "fails to act on 99%" of hateful messages from accounts with Twitter Blue subscriptions.
Mr Spiro criticised the organisation's methodology, writing that "the article is little more than a series of inflammatory, misleading, and unsupported claims based on a cursory review of random tweets."
He also alleged that CCDH was supported by funding from "X Corp's commercial competitors, as well as government entities and their affiliates".
The letter accused the organisation of attempting to drive away advertisers and said X Corp was considering legal action. The company has lost lost almost half of its advertising revenue since his $44bn (ÂŁ33.6bn) takeover, Mr Musk revealed in July.
In its reply CCDH's lawyer Roberta Kaplan said the allegations in the "ridiculous letter" had no basis in fact but were "a disturbing effort to intimidate those who have the courage to advocate against incitement, hate speech and harmful content online".
CCDH says it does not accept funding from social media companies nor government bodies, "both of whom we praise or criticise without fear or favour".
British politicians backed CCDH for its work on highlighting hate speech on social media.
Damian Collins, a British MP on the UK board of CCDH, said Elon Musk's commitment to free speech didn't seem to apply when his firm was criticised.
Latest Stories
-
We appeal to Ghanaians for patience as we replace more transformers – Energy Minister
47 seconds -
Power stability has improved since 2025 compared to 2024 – Jinapor
8 minutes -
Akosombo substation fire should never have happened – Ben Boakye
12 minutes -
Savannah region: Yazori Chief issues election boycott threat over underdevelopment concerns
17 minutes -
Backbone of economy in pain – Minority warns of collapse in worker morale
21 minutes -
Ghana Jazz Orchestra clocks in on International Jazz Day
27 minutes -
M-CARE’s first steering committee meeting targets chronic and mental health care integration in Ghana
28 minutes -
Bank of Ghana in 2025: Financially impaired but operationally resilient
36 minutes -
Fixing Akosombo does not end dumsor; energy crisis predates incident — Miracles Aboagye
37 minutes -
NAIMOS dawn operation leads to arrest of 49 suspected illegal miners after ambush on taskforce in Ahanta West
39 minutes -
Energy sector woes stem from political interference, not leadership failure — Kofi Bentil
58 minutes -
Communication around power outages has been ‘insincere’— Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
President Mahama breaks ground for modern 24-hour market in Asesewa
2 hours -
Video: Daniel Kofi-Kyereh ranks Andre Ayew above Essien and Appiah in blind ranking game
2 hours -
Mensa Otabil launches new book, ‘Leading the Church’, emphasizes governance and leadership transition
4 hours