Shlomo Kramer, CEO of Cato Networks, has publicly called for limiting the provisions of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The executive justified these remarks, claiming that it would help protect the country against the evolution of cyber warfare and social media manipulation.
The intersection of artificial intelligence, social media, and its effects on political stability is now being scrutinized.
Shlomo Kramer, CEO of Cato Networks, a cybersecurity firm, called for limiting the reach of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, saying that it was needed to protect the country’s future.
In a recent interview on CNBC, Kramer, who was also part of the Israeli unit 8200, a cybersecurity-focused group, stated that this was one of the measures that the U.S. government could apply to evolve its protections against cyber warfare and social media manipulation.

Kramer stated:
It’s time to limit the First Amendment to protect it. And quickly, before it’s too late. We need to control the platforms, all the social platforms; we need to stack, rank, the authenticity of every person that expresses themselves online and take control of what they are saying.
He remarked that governments were not doing this today, with enterprises bearing the brunt of this defense.
This “urgent need,” as he labeled it, sparked outrage in social platforms, raising concerns about the reach of these technological solutions and the possible effects on freedom of speech in social networks.
Matt Gaetz, who served as a Representative until last year, expressed strong opposition to Kramer’s stance. “No. We aren’t going to do this,” he stressed.
In the same way, Marjorie Taylor Greene, who announced her resignation from Congress, assessed that these measures were “everything we voted against in ‘24” when President Trump was elected.
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