Facebook, Twitter purge violent rhetoric as tensions rise over election
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[November 06, 2020]
By Elizabeth Culliford, Raphael Satter and Paresh Dave
(Reuters) - Facebook Inc removed on
Thursday a fast-growing group in which supporters of U.S. President
Donald Trump posted violent rhetoric, as it and other companies tackled
baseless claims and potential violence after a contentious election.
The "Stop the Steal" group, which called for "boots on the ground to
protect the integrity of the vote," was adding 1,000 new members every
10 seconds and had grown to 365,000 members in a day.
"The group was organized around the delegitimization of the election
process, and we saw worrying calls for violence from some members," a
Facebook spokeswoman said.
Group backers said they were organizing peaceful protests, had been
working hard to police the comments and that Facebook had given no
warning. Chris Barron, a spokesman for the group, said political
opponents were also organizing protests but were not banned.
"If Facebook wants to become the arbiter of truth then they've got a lot
of work to do," Barron said.
Facebook said the group's removal was in line with "exceptional
measures" amid "heightened tension."
Measures Facebook introduced on Thursday include warning users results
are not final as well as limiting how many people are shown live video
about the election, or posts that the company's algorithms believe
contain political misinformation.
For months, Trump and Republican allies have been laying the groundwork
to cast doubt on the integrity of the vote in case the president lost
his re-election bid.
As tallies increasingly improve the odds for Trump's Democratic
challenger, Joe Biden, and as U.S. broadcasters and other major media
outlets brush off Trump's claims of victory, the president and his
supporters have taken to social media to try to turn the narrative
around, floating conspiratorial theories using the hashtag #StopTheSteal.
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But social media companies have been signaling less patience with
disinformation and calls for violence. Eleven of the president's 32
tweets since Election Day on Tuesday have been placed behind a warning
label saying they were disputed, prompting him to use email and other
media to voice his claims, researchers said.
"Social media platforms can't allow themselves to be used to foment
anti-democratic and potentially violent activity," said Paul Barrett,
deputy director of New York University's Stern Center for Business and
Human Rights.
BANNON SUSPENDED
On Thursday, Snap Inc's Snapchat removed a video from Trump's account in
which Biden said he has an extensive "voter fraud organization." Biden's
statement came during an interview in which he was discussing his team
fighting voter suppression efforts, and Snap determined that Trump's use
out of context violated its policy against undermining the integrity of
civic processes.
Trump campaign social media manager Ryann McEnany decried Snap's action
in a tweet, saying in capital letters: "Why won't they let the American
people see this!?"
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3D printed ballot boxes are seen in front of a displayed Facebook
logo in this illustration taken November 4, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Twitter on Thursday suspended an account used by former Trump
campaign manager Steve Bannon after he recorded a video in which he
called for beheading FBI Director Christopher Wray as well as
government infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci for being
disloyal to Trump.
A Twitter spokesman cited company policy against glorifying
violence. Other services also removed the video on similar grounds.
But the takedowns and warnings are something Trump supporters appear
prepared for. Before Facebook deleted "Stop the Steal," organizers
directed members to an email sign-up page "in the event that social
media censors this group."
The group's membership surged because seven prominent conservatives
promoted it to their hundreds of thousands of followers, according
to Renee DiResta, a researcher involved in the anti-misinformation
Election Integrity Partnership.
While Facebook groups typically work as forums for shared interests,
they can harbor hyper-partisan misinformation.
"Facebook has been enabling and amplifying the infrastructure that's
now being used to attack our democratic process," said Arisha Hatch,
executive director of the Color of Change political action
committee, one of the country's largest online racial justice
groups.
A review of a small number of comments posted to "Stop the Steal"
before its deletion found no direct calls for violence, but its
organizing premise - that Republican votes are being "nullified" by
Democrats - has no basis in fact.
Facebook, which normally recommends groups to users that they may
want to join, last week suspended these recommendations for
political groups and new groups around the election.
The "Stop the Steal" group was run by the Trump action group Women
for America First. The non-profit organized protests against
COVID-19 restrictions and supported Trump during his impeachment
hearing.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford in Birmingham, England, Raphael
Satter in Washington and Paresh Dave in Oakland, California;
Additional reporting by Joseph Menn in San Francisco, California;
Katie Paul in Palo Alto, California, and Jack Stubbs in London;
Editing by Lisa Shumaker, Cynthia Osterman, Robert Birsel)
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