The Center for Countering Digital Hate said Thursday it would exit Elon Musk-owned social media site could hinder.
The departure marks the latest development in an ongoing battle between Musk and CCDH, which has accused him of spreading hate speech on the platform formerly known as Twitter. British news publisher The Guardian also said earlier this week that it would no longer post on X due to “disturbing content” on the platform.
CCDH said the updated terms for
Under the updated terms, any legal disputes relating to
“Now the billionaire can file lawsuits against anyone who disagrees with him on his platform,” CCDH said.
“We made the decision to exit X as the platform has continued to deteriorate.”
Musk and X did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.
Earlier this year, a US judge dismissed Musk’s lawsuit, accusing the nonprofit of collecting data to create false and misleading messages that the billionaire had turned X into a haven for hate speech, extremism and disinformation.
X is also involved in other lawsuits with nonprofits.
The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas is presiding over X’s lawsuit against Media Matters, accusing the group of defamation over a report of ads alongside extremist messages.
The court is also presiding over X’s lawsuit against Global Alliance for Responsible Media, accusing the group of unlawfully conspiring to boycott the site, causing it to lose revenue.
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