Elon Musk Temporarily Suspended Washington Post’s Taylor Lorenz for ‘Prior Doxxing Action,’ but She Denies She Doxxed Anyone

UPDATE, 12/18, 10:05 a.m. PT: Taylor Lorenz’s Twitter account (@TaylorLorenz) has been restored. She said the temporary suspension from Twitter appeared to be because she had posted links to her accounts on other social platforms, in violation of a new rule that Elon Musk announced Sunday. Later in the day, the page on Twitter’s help site about the new “Promotion of Alternative Social Platforms Policy” was removed; Musk tweeted that the policy “will be adjusted to suspending accounts only when that account’s *primary* purpose is promotion of competitors, which essentially falls under the no-spam rule.”

PREVIOUSLY: Washington Post tech columnist Taylor Lorenz said her Twitter account was suspended Saturday after she tweeted a request for comment at Elon Musk, the tech mogul who is the social network’s new owner, on a story she was working on.

Lorenz’s Twitter account, which she activated in 2010, had more than 340,000 followers before it was suspended. “Earlier tonight, Elon Musk suspended my Twitter account,” she wrote on her Substack. “I received zero communication from the company on why I was suspended or what terms I violated.”

“Super crazy. Elon seems to banning anyone who disagrees with him,” Lorenz said in a TikTok video she shared Saturday evening. Lorenz had been tweeting from an alternate Twitter account, @nodreamsoflabor, before that was also banned.

On Sunday at 6:23 a.m. PT, Musk tweeted about Lorenz’s account on Twitter, “Temp suspension due to prior doxxing action by this account. Will be lifted shortly.”

Lorenz told Variety that she has never “doxxed” anyone (on Twitter or anywhere else) and said that Twitter has never contacted her about any supposed violation of its anti-doxxing rules. After the Washington Post published an April 2022 story she wrote about the anti-LGBTQ account Libs of TikTok, Lorenz was accused of “doxxing” the creator of anti-LGBTQ account Libs of TikTok by revealing her identity as Brooklyn real estate agent Chaya Raichik. In a Twitter post at the time, Lorenz had defended the decision to identify Raichik as the person behind Libs of TikTok by noting that she “isn’t just some average woman with a social media account” but a “powerful influencer operating a massively impactful right wing media shaping discourse around LGBTQ+ rights.”

Twitter’s ban of Lorenz, who has regularly reported on Twitter and Musk, came after the mega-billionaire suspended the Twitter accounts of several journalists Thursday. Musk alleged they had “doxxed” him, after some (but not all) had posted links to an account that tracked his private jet, before reinstating several of them on Friday night.