Gain-of-Function Research and the COVID Origins Debate

Gain-of-Function Research and the COVID Origins Debate
Above: Health workers conduct COVID-19 tests at the St. Vincents Hospital drive-through testing clinic at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia on June 27, 2021. Image copyright: Steven Saphore/Contributor/AFP via Getty Images

Public Communication and Censorship

During the early stages of the pandemic, the Chinese government tightly controlled public discourse on COVID-19 origins.

Authorities allegedly censored social media posts, removed research from university websites, and restricted publication of findings related to the WIV unless approved in advance. At the same time, Chinese officials publicly rejected the lab leak theory and promoted alternative narratives, including the idea that the virus may have originated outside of China.

Above: Government workers wearing personal protective equipment wait in line for COVID-19 test at a mobile testing unit in the locked-down part of Hong Kong, China on January 24, 2021, Image copyright:Anthony Kwan/Getty Images

In the United States, public health leaders also took steps to discourage speculation about a lab-based origin. Emails from early 2020 show top officials like Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins discussing efforts to combat what they called a "destructive conspiracy." A State Department investigation into the origins was reportedly discontinued in early 2021 due to questions about its methodology and credibility.

The official position in 2020 aligned with the mainstream scientific claims: that COVID-19 most likely emerged from natural zoonotic spillover. However, by May 2021, U.S. President Joe Biden ordered a renewed intelligence review into the lab leak possibility.

Social Media Moderation

Social media platforms initially treated the lab leak theory as misinformation. In February 2021, Facebook explicitly banned posts claiming COVID-19 was man-made, citing guidance from health authorities. Twitter removed or down-ranked similar claims and suspended accounts like markets blogger Zero Hedge after it published unverified lab leak allegations. YouTube also removed videos that contradicted WHO and CDC guidance.

Above: A smartphone screen displays a new policy on COVID-19 misinformation with a Facebook website in the background in Arlington, Virginia on May 27, 2021, Image copyright:Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

Internal communications and court records — such as those disclosed in the Missouri v. Biden case — later indicated that some of these moderation decisions were influenced by informal communications between public officials and tech companies. By mid-2021, following renewed calls for investigation, platforms began updating their policies. Facebook lifted its ban on lab-origin discussions in May 2021, and other companies followed suit.

Scientific Communication

In early 2020, leading scientific journals published high-profile statements dismissing the lab leak theory. A February 2020 letter in The Lancet, later found to have been organized by EcoHealth Alliance's Peter Daszak, condemned "conspiracy theories" about non-natural origins. A March 2020 Nature Medicine article further reinforced this by concluding that SARS-CoV-2 was not engineered and a lab origin was unlikely.

These publications became widely cited as evidence that the lab leak theory had been debunked. Privately, however, some authors initially suspected a lab accident before aligning publicly with a natural origin. Other scientists who proposed lab-origin hypotheses reported difficulty publishing their work or facing professional backlash. It wasn’t until May 2021 that a turning point came, when Science published an open letter from 18 prominent scientists calling for a serious investigation into all origin possibilities, including a lab leak.