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House panel demands records from agency overseeing Biden’s AI plan after censorship outrage

The House Judiciary Committee has subpoenaed the Biden administration agency implementing an artificial intelligence research program to combat “misinformation” online — that would also help social media giants censor Americans’ free speech.

Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) wrote in a Tuesday letter exclusively obtained by The Post that the National Science Foundation (NSF) “has not produced the highest priority documents” about the controversial research program and failed to comply with voluntary requests for nearly a year.

The subpoena demands that NSF director Sethuraman Panchanathan hand over all internal records discussing the suppression or restriction of online content — including any potential documents on The Post’s censored October 2020 reports based on emails from Hunter Biden’s laptop.

Other moderated content may include views on the origins of COVID-19, the efficacy of vaccines and other pandemic-era concerns; foreign and domestic election interference; the “Twitter Files” and the censoring of journalists; transgender issues; abortion; climate change; guns; and “the use of financial services and systems to further political or social objectives.”

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan subpoenaed a Biden administration agency implementing an artificial intelligence research program to combat “misinformation” online, according to a letter exclusively obtained by The Post. AP
National Science Foundation director Sethuraman Panchanathan “has not produced the highest priority documents” about the controversial research program that would help social media giants censor Americans’ free speech. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

“It is necessary for Congress to gauge the extent to which NSF officials have coerced, pressured, worked with, or relied upon social media and other tech companies and third parties to censor speech,” Jordan told Panchanathan.

“Moreover, the Committee is in possession of documents that demonstrate that NSF personnel regularly interacted and communicated with organizations receiving NSF funds, including for projects that focused on combatting alleged misinformation online. NSF has yet to produce any records related to these communications or any other meetings.”

Panchanathan must appear before the committee and produce the requested documents and communications about the program at 9 a.m. Feb. 28, per the subpoena.

Jordan and like-minded lawmakers are especially concerned that AI could be used by YouTube, Reddit, Facebook and other platforms to limit the reach of critical journalism and other First Amendment activity.

It’s unknown whether any of the tools created as a part of the program have been taken up by social media companies — or executive branch agencies.

The subpoena demands that the NSF hand over all internal records discussing the suppression or restriction of online content — including any potential documents on The Post’s censored October 2020 article based on emails from Hunter Biden’s laptop. vmodica

In a Tuesday staff report, the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government revealed that under the NSF program, known as “Track F,” the feds forked over $39 million in grants to identify “misinformation” and create “education and training materials” for those with “vulnerabilities to disinformation methods.”

Researchers at three elite universities — the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Wisconsin Madison and the University of Michigan — as well as San Francisco-based tech nonprofit Meedan, received $13 million in grants for a subprogram titled “Trust & Authenticity in Communication Systems.”

The subcommittee released emails from some of those researchers who expressed particular concern that conservatives and veterans were more likely to be duped by “misinformation” or “disinformation” on the internet.

An NSF program, known as “Track F,” forked over $39 million in grants to identify “misinformation” and create “education and training materials” for those with “vulnerabilities to disinformation methods.” House Judiciary Committee

Some of the program’s tools could help take down harmful or illegal content — such as deepfake photos or child pornography — but the GOP report also quotes one MIT researcher who expressed concern about “broad swaths of the public” not being able to “sort truth from fiction online.”

Researchers noted that people who read “the Bible or the Constitution” were not fully informed about issues — and more likely to “fact check how media outlets reported the news” because they “distrusted both journalists and academics.”

A researcher at the University of Wisconsin also wrote about being “specifically focused on … skepticism regarding the integrity of U.S. elections and hesitancy related to COVID-19 vaccines.”

Researchers noted that people who read “the Bible or the Constitution” were not fully informed about issues — and more likely to “fact check how media outlets reported the news” because they “distrusted both journalists and academics.” House Judiciary Committee

At the University of Michigan, still another researcher advocated for the federal government being able to ultimately make content “moderation” decisions, rather than social media companies.

“Our misinformation service helps policy makers at platforms who want to … push responsibility for difficult judgments to someone outside the company … by externalizing the difficult responsibility of censorship,” the researcher said in a pitch letter to NSF.

A University of Washington researcher also wrote to an NSF official describing the attempts to shut down disinformation as an “inherently political” act that will lead to “censorship.”

A researcher at University of Wisconsin-Madison also wrote about being “specifically focused on … skepticism regarding the integrity of U.S. elections and hesitancy related to COVID-19 vaccines.”  AP

Jordan’s committee has gathered other evidence that the federal government under both former President Donald Trump and President Biden colluded with big tech platforms to suppress Americans’ speech.

Last year, lower federal court rulings found that the White House, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the FBI — among other agencies — also “likely violated the First Amendment” by having “likely coerced or significantly encouraged social-media platforms to moderate content.”

The Biden administration has since appealed the ruling in the case, Missouri v. Biden, to the Supreme Court.

An NSF spokesperson told The Post that the agency “has been working with the House Judiciary Committee to address their concerns and will continue to do so on the requests outlined in this report.”

“NSF does not engage in censorship and has no role in content policies or regulations,” a spokesperson said in a statement. “Per statute and guidance from Congress, we have made investments in research to help understand communications technologies that allow for things like deep fakes and how people interact with them.”

“By understanding how they operate and are being used, we can provide policymakers with the information they need to make informed decisions about regulations and guardrails to protect the public and ensure they can make informed decisions,” the spokesperson added.

“NSF did not at any point attempt to conceal or mislead the public, Congress, or the media about its Track F Program or any of its other investments. The ‘media strategy’ referenced in the committee’s report was done counter to the official NSF Media Policy and without the input or knowledge of NSF Leadership and is not being used by NSF.”