Prominent tech investor and star on Australia’s “Shark Tank” TV series Steve Baxter has lambasted U.S. tech giants’ for targeting and suspending social media app Parler as well as the accounts of U.S. President Donald Trump.
“This is pretty bleak stuff when this platform–Parler–is being held to account (by the tech giants) for the actions of its users,” the tech entrepreneur told The Epoch Times.
“All these amazing innovations (social media apps) come from the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which includes freedom of speech,” he said.
“The United States is a powerhouse because of the freedoms it has. To think that people who are the beneficiaries of that are so willing to burn it, there is not much thought going into that is there?” he added.
Baxter, who made his fortune in 2005 with the sale of his PIPE Networks for $300 million, described the events of the last few months as “a slide into Hell.”
“Every last part of it feels wrong,” he said. “We’ve been saying it for a while, this encroaching sort of tyranny. First, in liberal academics, then into people’s lives, and now with COVID-19 restrictions …”
Baxter is based in Brisbane, which just emerged from a three-day, city-wide lockdown to contain a single case of the mutated UK-strain of COVID-19.
On Friday, Twitter permanently removed U.S. President Donald Trump’s account for alleged violations of its “Glorification of Violence Policy.” The move came soon after civil unrest unfolded at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.
Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat followed with short-term suspensions of Trump from their platforms.
The actions have prompted criticism from leading Republicans: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley–who likened the move to something the Chinese Communist Party would do.
Australian Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack has criticised Twitter as well saying there is a double-standard at play.
“There’s been a lot of people who have said and done a lot of things on Twitter previously that haven’t received that sort of condemnation or indeed censorship,” he told ABC Radio on Monday.
Most notably, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian’s provocative Twitter post featuring an Australian soldier smiling and slitting the throat of an Afghan child, remains pinned to the top of his feed. The post caused national and international outrage.
However, McCormack conceded that as a private company, Twitter was within its rights to censure and close accounts on its company platform.
President Trump has attempted to remove Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which allows social media giants to moderate content on their platforms without repercussion. However, the U.S. Congress has been unable to pass the law.