Twitter hid the president's tweet, sent the day before the U.S.
presidential election, behind a label which said the content was
"disputed" and "might be misleading."
Trump and his Republican allies have repeatedly said, without
evidence, that mail-in votes are prone to fraud, although
election experts say that is rare in U.S. elections. Trump's
tweet also said the Supreme Court's decision would "induce
violence in the streets."
Social media companies are under pressure to curb misinformation
on their platforms ahead of the U.S. election. Twitter has
labeled or put warnings on tweets from Trump multiple times this
year for violating its rules.
Twitter also prevented users from retweeting or replying to the
post, allowing only 'quote tweets.' It said the tweets will also
not be algorithmically recommended by its systems.
The Election Integrity Partnership, who tweeted that Twitter
took action about 40 minutes after Trump's tweet was sent, said
would "be wise" to pick up the pace.
"Twitter’s action effectively stopped the tweet’s spread.
However, it had already been retweeted 55K+ times and favorited
126K+ times. This is as much or more reach than most other
tweets put out by @realDonaldTrump today," the research group
tweeted.
The U.S. Supreme Court last week allowed extended deadlines for
receiving mail-in ballots in Tuesday's election in Pennsylvania
and North Carolina, states pivotal to Trump's re-election
chances.
The decision let stand a ruling by Pennsylvania's top court
allowing mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day and received
up to three days later to be counted.
Facebook added a disclaimer to Trump's post, which had been
shared 4,200 times, saying that voting by mail and voting in
person have a "history of trustworthiness" in the United States,
with voter fraud being extremely rare.
Facebook also labeled a Fox News video posted by Trump in which
he talked about "cheating" in Pennsylvania with the same
message.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford in Birmingham, England
Kanishka Singh and Bhargav Acharya in Bengaluru; Editing by
Leslie Adler and Lincoln Feast.)
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