The juicy bits:
While X does have a policy around sharing private information, the company’s terms of service on March 20 did not mention a policy related to outing the identity of an anonymous user, and Benarroch did not respond to a request for clarification. On March 21, after WIRED published this story, X updated its privacy policy to specifically prohibit posting "the identity of an anonymous user, such as their name or media depicting them.” […]
“This is completely arbitrary, and under Twitter’s own community standards it says that a name is never considered private information,” Caraballo tells WIRED. “There’s an immense double standard here of the neo-Nazi comic guy being protected” by X. But then, she says, “The people that do this to anyone on the left are not only followed by [Musk] but are boosted by him. It’s completely inconsistent.” To her, it seems that whoever Musk favors gets protected, and anyone else is banned. “This is also a pretext for them to be able to go after anyone that they dislike,” Caraballo says.
Caraballo and others have pointed to accounts like Libs of TikTok and far-right troll Andy Ngo, both of which have shared private information about trans people but have not had their accounts suspended. Musk has also engaged with posts that doxed individuals on X, with seemingly no recourse for those accounts.
We really have moved to an era of just putting up with and choosing to continue to live in enshittification but still whining about it
I’m not on Twitter and you’re not on Twitter.
… and apparently neither is the guy who doxxed this Nazi, now.
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