TECH & MEDIA: Trump on Tuesday launched new attacks against the Silicon Valley companies that conservatives have accused of censoring right-leaning speech. In a pair of morning tweets, Trump singled out Google, accusing the search giant of promoting negative news about him and hiding favorable media coverage. Reuters: Trump accuses Google of hiding fair media coverage about him. The president did not provide any evidence for the claim, which appeared to originate from an unscientific experiment at PJ Media that was promoted by conservative news aggregator The Drudge Report. The Washington Post: Investigating Trump's claims of rigged search results. In a statement, Google denied that its search results algorithms are influenced by politics. "Search is not used to set a political agenda and we don't bias our results toward any political ideology. Every year, we issue hundreds of improvements to our algorithms to ensure they surface high-quality content in response to users' queries. We continually work to improve Google Search and we never rank search results to manipulate political sentiment." – a Google spokesperson. White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said the president's team is looking at what it can do to address the matter, although it's unclear how the administration could force a private company to alter a proprietary technology. © Twitter
Still, in going after Google and later broadening his attacks to Twitter and Facebook, the president was giving voice to a deep frustration that has been percolating among grass-roots conservatives. The Memo: Trump takes aim at tech giants. Republican lawmakers and influential right-leaning thinkers have been highlighting instances where they say Facebook, Twitter and YouTube have been punishing conservative content-makers or making it more difficult to find their posts. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg will be asked about this at a Senate hearing next week. Google's Sundar Pichai has declined to attend (Bloomberg). The hearing comes as social media companies struggle to balance demands that they limit the spread of conspiracy theories and "hate speech," while also remaining free of political bias and allowing for a broad range of content. More on the tech front … Instagram rolls out effort to stop 'fake news' (CNBC) … Breaking from industry norms, Yahoo is scanning emails for data to sell to advertisers (The Wall Street Journal) … Trump unblocks more Twitter users in response to U.S. court ruling (Reuters). **** INVESTIGATIONS: House Republicans grilled Department of Justice (DOJ) official Bruce Ohr in a closed-door session for nearly eight hours on Tuesday. The Hill: House Republicans say Ohr interview escalates surveillance concerns. Ohr is the latest senior law enforcement official to attract the ire of Trump and his allies, who have been probing the origins of the investigation into Trump's campaign and allegations of political bias at the DOJ and FBI. Ohr has come under scrutiny for his ties to the opposition research firm Fusion GPS and British spy Christopher Steele. Steele compiled the infamous opposition research dossier on Trump that the FBI used in part to justify the investigation into Trump and his campaign. Ohr's wife, Nellie Ohr, worked for Fusion GPS during the campaign. GOP lawmakers said Tuesday that the FBI did not disclose some of these apparent conflicts of interest when it sought warrants to spy on members of Trump's campaign. © Twitter
Reuters: Trump, without evidence, blames China for hacking Hillary Clinton's emails. > The second trial for Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort has been pushed back a week and will begin on Sept. 24. Manafort's lawyers are trying to get the trial moved out of Washington, D.C., arguing that the case is too politicized to take place in the nation's capital (Reuters). That move didn't fly when the defense tried it in Manafort's first trial in Alexandria, Va. A jury there found Manafort guilty on eight charges of bank and tax fraud. In this second trial, Manafort and his former business associate are charged with illegal foreign lobbying. > Michael Cohen's attorney Lanny Davis is backtracking on bombshell allegations he made to several media outlets. Davis was cited as an anonymous source in several stories claiming that Cohen was willing to tell special counsel Robert Mueller that the president had advance knowledge about a Trump Tower meeting between his son Donald Trump Jr. and Russians promising opposition research on Hillary Clinton. CNN first reported that story in late July. Davis now says he was the anonymous source referenced in the report, and that his claims were false. BuzzFeed: Davis says he was a source for CNN's Trump Tower story. Several other media outlets followed CNN's story and have since revealed that Davis was also a source for what became erroneous reporting. NBC News: Davis says he was wrong about Trump Tower meeting. CNN is standing by its report. Famed Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein had the lead byline. CNN: Davis keeps changing his story on Trump Tower meeting. Glenn Greenwald: CNN refuses to explain discrepancies amid allegations it misled audiences about "bombshell" Trump Tower report. The Associated Press: Trump, Cohen lawyers stumble on facts. Full disclosure: Davis is an opinion contributor with The Hill. > Attorney General Jeff Sessions has been encouraged by some Republicans to resist the president's public pressures and criticisms and remain at the Justice Department – and especially until after the midterms (The Wall Street Journal). |
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