Twitter tests labels, community moderation for lies by public figures
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[February 22, 2020]
(Reuters) - Twitter Inc said on
Thursday that it was testing a new community moderation approach that
would enable users to identify misleading information posted by
politicians and public figures and add brightly colored labels under
those tweets.
NBC News earlier reported that Twitter company documents showing a
mockup of the new approach were accessible on a publicly available
website, although it did not identify the site.
The company said that the leaked illustrations showed one possible
iteration of a new approach to combat misinformation.
"We're exploring a number of ways to address misinformation and provide
more context for Tweets on Twitter," Twitter said in a statement. "This
is a design mockup for one option that would involve community feedback.
Misinformation is a critical issue and we will be testing many different
ways to address it."
A spokesman said the project was in the early stages and not currently
staffed.
The mockup obtained by NBC News showed a plan to develop a "community
reports" feature, which Twitter likened to Wikipedia. Twitter users
would earn points and badges for rating "harmfully misleading" content.
Twitter and other social media companies are under intense pressure to
stem lies and misinformation on their platforms.
They have introduced measures in recent months designed to head off
interference in the U.S. presidential election in November, although
critics say they are insufficient compared to the scale of the problem.
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he Twitter logo and binary cyber codes are seen in this illustration
taken November 26, 2019. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Twitter announced in the summer that it would label and de-emphasize
tweets that broke its rules but came from important public figures
like politicians. But it has not yet done so for any tweets.
The company also banned political ads in the fall and said earlier
this month that it would apply "false" warning labels to tweets
containing synthetic or deceptively edited forms of media and remove
any that are likely to cause harm.
Democratic presidential contender Mike Bloomberg on Thursday tweeted
a video of Wednesday night's debate edited to make it appear as
though other candidates were rendered speechless when he asked if
any of them had started businesses.
The Twitter spokesman said the company would likely label
Bloomberg's tweet under the new policy on synthetic and deceptively
edited media, which is set to come into effect on March 5.
(Reporting by Katie Paul in San Francisco and Neha Malara in
Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D'Silva and Cynthia Osterman)
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