Musk’s X investigated by French prosecutors over alleged algorithmic bias, report says

PARIS (Reuters) -French prosecutors have opened an investigation into Elon Musk’s X social media platform over alleged algorithmic bias, Franceinfo reported on Friday, citing an official statement.

News of the probe comes just days before a major AI summit in Paris, which is due to host global leaders including U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as well as Alphabet and Microsoft executives.

The Paris prosecutor’s office did not respond to a Reuters request for comment. Nor did X, formerly known as Twitter.

The reported investigation underlines growing global wariness over the power of X, the name given to Twitter by tech billionaire Musk after he bought the social media network.

Musk has used X to personally support right-wing parties and causes in countries including Germany and Britain, leading to concerns about undue foreign interference.

The French investigation was opened after centrist lawmaker Eric Bothorel, posting on X, said he had written to the J3 cybercrime unit of the Paris prosecutors’ office with his concerns that X was using biased algorithms, Franceinfo said.

X’s algorithms are “likely to have distorted the operation of an automated data processing system. The prosecutors and specialised assistants from the cybercrime unit are analysing it and carrying out initial technical checks,” Franceinfo cited the Paris public prosecutor’s office as saying.

“I sent a letter to the cyber J3 prosecutor’s office on this subject on Jan. 12,” Bothorel wrote on X.

The J3 unit of the Paris prosecutors’ office led last year’s probe of Telegram boss Pavel Durov, who was arrested after landing at a Paris airport. Durov, who is out on bail, denies the allegations, but Telegram has since said it is cooperating more closely with police to remove illegal content.

The J3 unit has shown a willingness to use novel and aggressive laws to target the owners of major platforms.

X was blocked for more than five months in Brazil last year for failing to stop the spread of misinformation, before eventually complying with a Supreme Court order that allowed for the network to be reestablished.

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; Editing by Benoit Van Overstraeten and Alexander Smith)

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