You didn't have these same concerns when there were reports from the NY Times about Trump's taxes. They never made the tax returns available to anyone for inspection of their accuracy. If they were obtained, then it was done illegally because Trump never authorized disclosure as required by federal law. But that story was widely reported and social media had no apparent issue with anyone reporting it there despite the lack of any verification. They certainly did not suspend the NY Times' account as a result like they did with the NY Post. That is clear censorship based upon political bias.
No it isn't. The details of some tax returns being made public were not designed to influence an election. The Hunter Biden lies had influencing the election as it's only real purpose. That is one hell of a difference.
And you are wildly confused about the issue under discussion. Of course no one wants false information reported about them on social media. That is why individuals have recourse to libel actions. Individuals can be sued for writing false information.
Sure, they can sue, but that takes time and lots of it. In the meantime the fake story would have influenced the election in just the same way as the alleged e-mail scandal influenced the 2016 election. And, what's more, who are those individuals you can sue when they write a newspaper report based upon information provided to them by a third party?
Social media platforms, however, are protected by federal law from such lawsuits because they are supposed to be platforms for the exchange of information (like a telephone company) and not publishers.
And Trump, with all the lies he has told, has benefited greatly from this.
Imagine if your telephone carrier broke into your conversation to tell you that you couldn't discuss certain topics because they didn't like your opinion or that your telephone access would be suspended if you discussed the Hunter Biden story.
That's a BS comparison. A telephone conversation is private between two people. You don't have phone calls where all the world can hear what's being said.
Social media platforms are acting like arbiters of the truth instead of platform providers. If they decide to do so, then they should be subject to suit like anyone else.
They only take action in the rarest of cases. If, as you suggest, they act like arbiters of the truth, Trump's twitter account would look significantly different from how it looks today.