Meta
Social media company (parent of Facebook/Instagram) reporting reductions in enforcement errors without bias admissions.
Appears in 3 Cases
As of April 6, 2026, no new transparency reports have been released by X, Meta, or other major platforms beyond previously identified ones, with X's latest covering H2 2024 and Meta's H1 2026 report (H2 2025 data) from March 19. No public response from Mark Zuckerberg to the House Judiciary Committee's March 16 letter demanding censorship records preservation. Recent X posts from March 26 to April 6 feature sporadic anecdotal shadowban complaints from non-partisan or diverse users (e.g., Nigerian activist on 'unalivings', UK Labour suppression claim), lacking metrics, patterns, or ideological skew; no new leaks, studies, whistleblowers, or audits confirm bias.
Early 2026 saw intensified US congressional scrutiny of foreign censorship pressures, with House Judiciary Committee's February report on EU's decade-long campaign against American media, hearings on Europe's threats, and a March 16 letter to Meta's Zuckerberg demanding records preservation on foreign-compelled moderation. Democrats countered with a February 24 hearing alleging Trump administration censorship. Germany's January law enables raids on tech offices without judges, while social media researchers sued Trump admin on March 10 over visa denials framed as censorship.
Since the March 19-20, 2026 DOJ indictment of SMCI affiliates for smuggling NVIDIA AI servers, new SEC Form 4 filings reveal additional NVIDIA insider sales on March 20 including Director Mark Stevens (221,682 shares), CFO Colette Kress ($10.9M), totaling part of a $14M wave under 10b5-1 plans, with no links to the SMCI case or illegal trading. SMCI stock rebounded 5% on March 23 after a 28-33% plunge, as the company cooperates and was not charged. No new SEC probes, unusual options remain speculative without confirmed insider ties, aligning with routine disposals amid market volatility.
