**BREAKING: Leaked Internal Strategy Memo Reveals Sen. Thom Tillis Quietly Pushed Bill That Would Grant Tech Giants Legal Immunity From User Data Breaches – As His Top Campaign Donor Just Happens to Be a Major Data Broker**

BREAKING: Leaked Internal Strategy Memo Reveals Sen. Thom Tillis Quietly Pushed Bill That Would Grant Tech Giants Legal Immunity From User Data Breaches – As His Top Campaign Donor Just Happens to Be a Major Data Broker

Washington D.C. – In a development that has privacy advocates up in arms, a leaked internal memo from a bipartisan working group has surfaced, revealing that Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) is the lead sponsor of a controversial, little-known piece of legislation dubbed the “Digital Trust & Data Shield Act.”

According to the memo, which was obtained by digital rights group The Reclamation Project, the bill’s fine print does something remarkable: it absolves large tech platforms and data brokers from any liability for data breaches—provided they claim they were “acting in good faith” under a new, loosely defined “national security framework.”

The bill’s critics say it would effectively make corporations like Meta, Amazon, and Palantir immune to class-action lawsuits, even if they knowingly fail to secure user information.

But here’s the twist that has conspiracy theorists sharpening their pitchforks: public FEC filings confirm that Tillis’s single largest campaign donor over the past 18 months is DataBridge Analytics, a shadowy data aggregator that has been hit with three separate FTC complaints for selling sensitive location data to foreign adversaries.

“The Senator says he’s protecting American innovation,” said Reclamation Project lead analyst Sarah Kline. “But his bank account says he’s protecting the very companies that profit from our digital slavery.”

When asked for comment, Tillis’s office provided a boilerplate statement: “Senator Tillis is committed to balancing consumer privacy with technological competitiveness. This bill strengthens cybersecurity standards and closes loopholes. Any suggestion of impropriety is a distraction.”

The timing raises eyebrows: the bill is scheduled for a closed-door “markup session” next week, with no public