Twitter
said that it is cracking down on mean, hateful or menacing tweets that
cross the red line from free speech into abuse. Twitter is overhauling
its safety policy and beefing up the team responsible for enforcing it,
along with investing “heavily” in ways to detect and limit the reach of
abusive content, general counsel Vijaya Gadde said in an column
published by the Washington Post.
“We need to do a better job combating abuse without chilling or silencing speech,” Gadde said.
Twitter
last month modified its rules to ban ‘revenge porn’ the tweeting of
intimate or revealing pictures or video of people without their
permission. The San Francisco-based micro-blogging site is also taking
steps to curtail the use of anonymously created Twitter accounts to
intimidate or silence targeted people.
“We
are changing our approach to this problem, in some ways that won’t be
readily apparent and in others that will be,” Gadde said.
Twitter
has tripled the size of the team responsible for protecting users of
the service, resulting in a five-fold increase in the speed of response
to complaints, according to the general counsel.
“We
are also overhauling our safety policies to give our teams a better
framework from which to protect vulnerable users,” Gadde said. Changes
included expanding the definition of banned “abuse” to include indirect
threats of violence.
“As
some of our users have unfortunately experienced firsthand, certain
types of abuse on our platform have gone unchecked because our policies
and product have not appropriately recognized the scope and extent of
harm inflicted by abusive behavior,” Gadde said.
“Even
when we have recognized that harassment is taking place, our response
times have been inexcusably slow and the substance of our responses too
meager. This is, to put it mildly, not good enough.”
Instagram targets terror
Facebook
last month updated its “community standards” guidelines, giving users
more clarity on acceptable posts relating to nudity, violence, hate
speech and other contentious topics.
Facebook-owned
smartphone photo and video sharing service Instagram followed suit on
Thursday with a similar overhaul of its rules about what is deemed
unacceptable.
“It
was time for a refresh; to streamline it and provide a better
explanation,” Instagram director of public policy Nicky Jackson Colaco
told AFP, citing the services global growth since being acquired by
Facebook three years ago in a deal valued at a billion dollars.
“We
are setting expectations for what kinds of content we think are
acceptable to share on Instagram and what could happen if you violated
the policy.”
Instagram
boasts more than 300 million active users worldwide, while Facebook
lays claim to about 1.38 billion active monthly users.
Instagram
guidelines ban nudity, along with threats, and hate speech. The new
community guidelines state that “sharing graphic images for sadistic
pleasure or to glorify violence is never allowed.”
Facebook’s
updated community doctrine states that the world’s biggest social
network will not allow a presence from groups advocating “terrorist
activity, organized criminal activity or promoting hate.”
The
moves come with Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and other social media
struggling with defining acceptable content and freedom of expression,
and with these services increasingly linked to radical extremism and
violence.
“What
we come back to is what we want our platform to be used for and what we
don’t want it to be used for,” Jackson Colaco said, noting that
Instagram was created in a ‘post 9/11 world.’
“Instagram is not a place to support or praise terrorism, organized crime, or hate groups,” the new community guidelines stated.
“We
remove content that contains credible threats or hate speech, content
that targets private individuals to degrade or shame them, personal
information meant to blackmail or harass someone, and repeated unwanted
messages.”
Posted by : Gizmeon
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