This week on the GeekWire Podcast: Newly unsealedΒ court documents reveal the behind-the-scenes history of Microsoft and OpenAI, including a surprise: Amazon Web Services was OpenAIβs original partner. We tell the story behind the story, explaining how it all came to light.
The Washington Post building in Washington, D.C. (Ron Cogswell Photo via Flickr)
FBI agents searched the home of a Washington Post reporter on Wednesday morning as part of an investigation into a government contractor accused of illegally retaining classified government materials.
The Post reported that federal agents seized a phone, two laptops β one work and one personal βΒ and a Garmin watch from reporter Hannah Natanson, who was at her home in Virginia at the time.
The governmentβs action raised questions about whether Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who bought the Post in 2013, will step in in any way.
CNNβs Brian Stelter wrote in his Reliable Sources newsletter Wednesday morning that several staffers told him βtheyβre wondering what, if anything, BezosΒ will do to defend Natanson and the Post from this aggressive government action.β
Natanson covers the federal workforce and has been a part of Postβs βmost high-profile and sensitive coverage during the first year of the second Trump administration,β according to the newspaper. But she is not the focus of the probe.
A warrant said that law enforcement is investigating Aurelio Perez-Lugones, a system administrator in Maryland who has a top-secret security clearance and has been accused of accessing and taking home classified intelligence reports that were found in his lunchbox and his basement, according to an FBI affidavit.
Natanson wrote a compelling first-person account in December of her time covering the Trump administration and the hundreds of government workers sheβd been in contact with as sources.
Bezosβ influence at the Post has come into focus in recent years. In February he shook up the newspaperβs opinion pages by refocusing the section on supporting and defending what he called βtwo pillarsβ βΒ personal liberties and free markets.
That action came in the wake of his decision in 2024 to end theΒ newspaperβs tradition of endorsing candidatesΒ for president βΒ including a reported spiking of the Postβs endorsement of Kamala Harris. The action cost the PostΒ more than 200,000 digital subscribersΒ and a wave of backlash during the contentious run-up to Trumpβs re-election.
After Trumpβs re-election, Bezos joined other tech leaders in expressing aΒ willingness to workΒ with the administration. Bezos was among those who attended the presidential inauguration.