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The Minnesota DFL alleges she ignored campaign contribution limits by accepting more than the maximum allowed from nine different donors.
Elon Musk’s social media platform X filed a suit Wednesday over a Minnesota law prohibiting the sharing of “deepfake” videos to influence an election, alleging it violates free
(ABC 6 News) — In Minnesota, an organization could face criminal charges for illegally posting private voter data online.
Elon Musk and X (formerly Twitter) are locked in a legal battle with the state of Minnesota over its deepfake election law, raising critical questions about the intersection of technology, free speech,
The Heintzeman campaign says the contributions are legal and calls the claims a baseless effort to smear her reputation just before the election.
Elon Musk's social media platform, X, is suing Minnesota over a state law that bans using artificial intelligence-generated deep fakes to influence elections.
The law makes it a crime to disseminate deepfakes within 90 days before a political party's nominating convention, after the start of absentee voting, or any election.
Elon Musk’s X Corp. is alleging Minnesota’s law regulating the spread of election-related deepfakes online violates the social media platform’s First Amendment rights.
As the state comes in second for overall voter turnout at 77%, Minnesota’s youth vote rises to the top at 62%.