



âȘ The State Department isnât skirting the First Amendment. It is driving a stake through its heart…
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FILLER
he Federal Government peddled technology to Big Tech companies to assist them in censoring Americansâ speech on social media in the run-up to the 2020 election, according to emails Missouri and Louisiana uncovered in their First Amendment lawsuit against the Biden Administration.
Specifically, the State Department marketed this censorship technology through its Global Engagement Center. In other words, our tax dollars not only funded the development of tools to silence speech that dissented from the regimeâs narrative. They also paid for government employees to act as sales reps pitching the censorship products to Big Tech.
Iâve been âtasked with building relationships with technology companies,â Samaruddin Stewart, then a senior adviser for the State Departmentâs Global Engagement Center or âGEC,â wrote in an early-February 2020 introductory email to LinkedIn, allegedly requesting a meeting. According to the lawsuit, his email also suggested he would be reaching out to other social media companies interested in âcountering disinformation.âÂ
On March 9, 2020, Stewart again contacted LinkedIn, referencing an earlier verbal discussion and writing:
Iâll send information [to LinkedIn representatives] about gaining access to Disinfo Cloud â which is a GEC funded platform that offers stakeholders an opportunity to discover companies, technology, and tools that can assist with identifying, understanding, and addressing disinformation.
These two emails are explosive. Yet because they were revealed in two passing paragraphs of the 164-page complaint filed by Missouri, Louisiana, and a handful of other plaintiffs against the Biden Administration, they â and their enormous significance â have been overlooked.
âCold-Callingâ Big Tech
The Stewart emails establish that in 2020, Federal Government actors contacted social media giants to promote GECâs Disinfo Cloud. GEC represented that this government platform provided âcompanies, technology, and toolsâ to âassist with identifying, understanding, and addressing disinformation.â Then it gave private tech companies access to Disinfo Cloud.Â
Almost identical to how GEC described Disinfo Cloud in congressional testimony, the State Departmentâs webpage marketed it as a âone-stop shopâ to âidentify and then test tools that counter propaganda and disinformation. Fact checkingâ and âmedia authenticationâ are just a couple of the types of technologies available through the dashboard.

GEC didnât just promote Disinfo Cloud or give Big Tech access to what GEC called âthe U.S. governmentâs online repository.â Government employees at GEC also offered to help private companies identify tools to suit their specific needs. Just âwriteâ to the GECâs Technology Engagement Division about âwhat your office needs to counter propaganda and disinformation,â the State Department instructed on its webpage, and the government will âassistâ in finding âa technological solution.âÂ
âTestbedâ
Access to Disinfo Cloud, according to the State Departmentâs webpage, also provides âa gatewayâ to the GECâs Technology Engagement Divisionâs âTestbed,â allowing users to review and test the technology against their unique needs.Â
While Stewartâs emails donât expressly mention the âTestbedâ feature, the State Department boasts that the âprivate sectorâ uses both Disinfo Cloud and Testbed. The GECâs webpage also invites Disinfo Cloud users to ask âfor assistance in identifying a technological solution or draft a test proposal for a tool.â If Disinfo Cloud users canât find a tool that works for them, the GEC Technology Engagement team stresses it âis open to insights and is here to help implement ideas to move the counter propaganda and disinformation mission forward.â
Infomercials
Deposition testimony by FBI Agent Elvis Chan suggests GECâs marketing of the censorship tools went beyond making cold calls (or emails) to LinkedIn and other Big Tech companies. It also seemingly went further than providing product advice and samples on Disinfo Cloud: The GECâs Technology Engagement Division apparently hosted infomercials to help the private vendors market their censorship software.
Chan, the assistant special agent in charge of the cyber branch at the FBIâs San Francisco field office, was âone of the primary peopleâ communicating with social media companies about supposed âdisinformation,â and thus is one of the named defendants in Missouri v. Biden. As part of that litigation, the plaintiffs deposed Chan. During questioning, Chan testified that ahead of the 2020 election, he periodically spoke with Stewart, who would meet with the social media companies separately from Chan.Â
According to Chan, Stewart met with policy individuals with the various social media companies about âdifferent initiatives.â Those initiatives included various kinds of vendor-made software âthat they would pilot to see if they could detect malign foreign influence on social media platforms.âÂ
Chan further testified that Stewart and GEC âwould provide webinarsâ from these vendors. As Chan explained, âThe State Department was just providing a venue where different vendors could show off their products.â The presentations were open to the general public, said Chan, but the GEC âwould invite all sorts of audiences, to include researchers, employees from State Department counterparts, so typically Ministry of Foreign Affairs.â The intended audience, according to Chan, was âState Department-equivalent personnel, social media companies, and researchers.â
Chan said he attended only a couple of the webinars because the companies took only a âsurface-levelâ look at the content, and thus he didnât consider the technology useful to the FBI. But apparently, it was fine for the State Department to market the same tools to social media companies.Â
From Chanâs deposition testimony, it appears Stewart, the GECâs then-senior adviser, made the equivalent of sales calls and hosted infomercials, all for the purpose of pushing various censorship services to social media companies.Â
It is unclear whether these webinars were in addition to the GECâs âTech Demo Seriesâ â at which private vendors showcased their knack for fighting so-called disinformation for âU.S. government counterparts and foreign partnersâ â or whether, after the GEC sent a full-time representative to Silicon Valley in December of 2019 (presumably Stewart), the Tech Demo Series was opened to the public. However, given that the official Disinfo Cloud Twitter account promoted the Tech Demo Series, it seems likely that GEC expanded its target audience for the series to include the private sector and other Disinfo Cloud users.Â
Either way, Chanâs deposition testimony reveals our government marketed censorship technology to social media companies through âwebinars.â And while Chan claimed he didnât think GEC endorsed the products, the government expressly represented the Disinfo Cloud technology as tools to âassistâ with attacking so-called disinformation.
The Tools
So what exactly were those tools?
From open-source material, it is difficult, if not impossible, to identify the entire dataset of tech companies featured on Disinfo Cloud or participating in the Tech Demo Series. Thatâs because Disinfo Cloud has âbeen retired as [a] GEC-sponsored effort,â according to the State Department. The DisinfoCloud.com webpage has also been shuttered.
But because GEC ran various âtech challenges,â giving winners State Department âsponsorshipâ on the governmentâs Disinfo Cloud Testbed â advertised as worth $25,000 â among other things, several censorship companies involved can be identified, including NewsGuard, PeakMetrics, and Omelas.Â
NewsGuardâs censorship technology includes âits unreliable reliability ratings database of thousands of news and information websites and a second database of purported hoaxes,â as I detailed in March. NewsGuardâs winning tech-challenge entry built upon those databases and used âAI and social listening tools to identify the initial source of the hoax,â and to find instances of the hoax being ârepeated or amplifiedâ online.
The second winner, PeakMetrics, offered a dashboard for tracking mentions of a topic across multiple media channels with social listening technology. The third winner, Omelas, developed tools to visually map online information.Â
The government gave these winners the ability to pilot their technology on Disinfo Cloudâs Testbed. Then it promoted Disinfo Cloud to social media giants as offering âaccess to companies, technology, and tools that can assist with identifying, understanding, and addressing disinformation.âÂ
So were NewsGuard, PeakMetrics, and Omelas among the companies GEC marketed to Big Tech? Did they participate in the government-run Tech Demos and present infomercials to the private sector? Did GEC help these vendors test their products for private companies on the Testbed?Â
In Practice
Consider the implications, using NewsGuard to illustrate.Â
NewsGuard rates various media outlets on a 100-point scale and provides a red âunreliableâ rating if its âexpertsâ score the news source below 60. The company rates The Federalist âredâ and claims it is one of the top-10 âmost influential misinformers.â Conversely, some of the outlets that botched the biggest political stories of the century maintain a 100 percent reliability score.
The government awarded NewsGuard a $25,000 prize to develop new technology on Disinfo Cloud, using, in part, that ratings system as a backbone. NewsGuard would later receive an additional $750,000 from the government to advance the development of its censorship technology. PeakMetrics and Omelas also both scored additional government funding of $1.5 and $1 million respectively.Â
But think about the governmentâs other behind-the-scenes censorship entanglements. The government, via your tax dollars, funded both Disinfo Cloud, which provided the technology necessary to pilot the program, and the outside contractor, Park Advisors, that managed it.Â
The State Departmentâs GEC promoted the companies and technology featured on Disinfo Cloud, and a government liaison working for GEC personally contacted social media companies to encourage them to use the platform. The government also hosted Tech Demo Series for the vendors to market their products to the private sector.
Disinfo Cloud regularly promoted private censorship technology on its official Twitter account and retweeted NewsGuardâs announcement of its partnership with Mediabrands to âbring NewsGaurdâs rating work to TV news programming.


Then beyond promoting the censorship tools, government employees working with GEC helped social media and private-sector businesses identify, test, and tweak the most âappropriateâ technology for their âneeds.â
And what are those âneeds?â Censoring the speech of you and your fellow Americans.
A Scandal Like No Other
This scandal far surpasses the one that formerly ensnared GEC, when it was revealed the State Department awarded the Global Disinformation Index (GDI) â another âratingsâ company that blacklists conservative outlets â $100,000 as part of the U.S.-Paris Tech Challenge. GDI also reportedly received money from other government-funded organizations. Those taxpayer funds helped finance GDIâs blacklist of conservative media outlets, which advertisers relied upon to defund dissenters.
But what Stewartâs emails now reveal is that the government is not merely funding censorship research. It is acting as a sales rep to market censorship technology to private companies.Â
The State Department isnât skirting the First Amendment. It is driving a stake through its heart. âȘ























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