Alexander Hall
MRC Free Speech America Staff Writer

Alexander Hall works as a Staff Writer for the Free Speech America division of NewsBusters at the Media Research Center. He is also the host of TechShark, a show featuring weekly tech/politics stories, a joint project of MRC Free Speech America and MRCTV. Before his current position, he graduated from Saint Mary’s College of California with a bachelor’s degree in Communications.

Alexander Hall | July 29, 2020

Congressman Jim Jordan (R-OH) raked Big Tech over the coals, saying there’s no more denying what can be plainly seen: “Big Tech is out to get conservatives. That’s not a suspicion. That's not a hunch. That's a fact.”

Jordan slammed Amazon…

Alexander Hall | July 28, 2020

Twitter can pretend that niche articles about the popularity of socialism are trending, meanwhile a comedian can tweet a poo emoji and a famous puppet to get more traction.

“One of the way [sic] Twitter manipulates us is with bogus trends…

Alexander Hall | July 28, 2020

Tomorrow’s hearing looks like regulation judgment day for the CEO’s of four of America’s largest tech companies.

This Wednesday, the CEO’s of four major Big Tech companies, including Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Apple CEO Tim Cook, Google CEO…

Alexander Hall | July 27, 2020

Even in an election year as divided and chaotic as 2020, millions of Americans can seem to agree that Big Tech has too much political clout. 

An overwhelming majority of Americans are skeptical over Big Tech’s unchecked power, a Pew…

Alexander Hall | July 27, 2020

A Florida man sent death threats to a respected conservative organization on social media, and while the government took them seriously, Facebook moderators reportedly did not.

Facebook claims to protect its users from being targeted for…

Alexander Hall | July 24, 2020

Don’t doubt that Wikipedia is liberal. Fierce debate erupted among Wikipedia moderators about whether Fox News could even be used as a credible source in Wikipedia entries. It ended by being a source that could only be used with proper warnings…