Right-wing media are spreading the debunked myth that the Democratic National Campaign and the Biden administration are planning to monitor private citizens’ text messages for anti-vaccine misinformation.
The false story came from a misconstrued July 12 Politico article that stated, “Biden allied groups, including the Democratic National Committee, are also planning to engage fact-checkers more aggressively and work with SMS carriers to dispel misinformation about vaccines that is sent over social media and text messages.” As PolitiFact reported, “There is no evidence that the Biden administration aims to intercept private texts”:
The DNC told PolitiFact it is contacting carriers about texts sent en masse that "spread scams and disinformation."
DNC spokesman Lucas Acosta said the DNC "has no ability to access or read people’s private text messages, and we are not working with any government agency, including the White House, to try to see personal text messages.
"However, when the DNC's counter-disinformation program receives complaints or reports of fraudulent broadcast SMSs that we believe violate the text aggregators’ terms of service, we notify the broadcast text platform," Acosta added.
...
There is no evidence that the Biden administration aims to intercept private texts. A trade group said wireless carriers do not read or moderate content in texts and are not working with third parties to do so.
The statement is False.
Despite numerous reports noting that the text message story is false, prominent media figures -- including prime-time Fox News hosts and Spotify’s Joe Rogan -- promoted the story to their audiences:
- On July 12, Fox prime-time host Tucker Carlson promoted the false story, stating, “Today we learned the Biden administration considers censorship applicable to private speech as well. What you say in private, when you're alone with your phone, you won't be able to say or read what you want because the DNC plans to control, and apparently they have the ability to control, the flow of information that you receive on your phone.” (Later in the episode, Carlson was joined by Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX) to double down on the false claim.)
Correction (9/2/21): This piece has been updated to correct the spelling of Saagar Enjeti's first name.