Twitter plan to fight midterm misinformation falls short, voting rights
experts say
Send a link to a friend
[August 12, 2022]
By Sheila Dang
(Reuters) -Twitter Inc on Thursday set out
a plan to combat the spread of election misinformation that revives
previous strategies, but civil and voting rights experts said it would
fall short of what is needed to prepare for the upcoming U.S. midterm
elections.
The social media company said it will apply its civic integrity policy,
introduced in 2018, to the Nov. 8 midterms, when numerous U.S. Senate
and House of Representatives seats will be up for election. The policy
relies on labeling or removing posts with misleading content, focused on
messages intended to stop voting or claims intended to undermine public
confidence in an election.
In a statement, Twitter said it has taken numerous steps in recent
months to "elevate reliable resources" about primaries and voting
processes. Applying a label to a tweet also means the content is not
recommended or distributed to more users.
The San Francisco-based company is currently in a legal battle with
billionaire Elon Musk over his attempt to walk away from his $44-billion
deal to acquire Twitter.
Musk has called himself a "free speech absolutist," and has said Twitter
posts should only be removed if there is illegal content, a view
supported by many in the tech industry.
But civil rights and online misinformation experts have long accused
social media and tech platforms of not doing enough to prevent the
spread of false content, including the idea that President Joe Biden did
not win the 2020 election.
They warn that misinformation could be an even greater challenge this
year, as candidates who question the 2020 election are running for
office, and divisive rhetoric is spreading following an FBI search of
former President Donald Trump's Florida home earlier this week.
"We're seeing the same patterns playing out," said Evan Feeney, deputy
senior campaign director at Color of Change, which advocates for the
rights of Black Americans.
In the blog post, Twitter said a test of redesigned labels saw a decline
in users' retweeting, liking and replying to misleading content.
Researchers say Twitter and other platforms have a spotty record in
consistently labeling such content.
[to top of second column]
|
Figurines with computers and smartphones
are seen in front of Twitter logo in this illustration, July 24,
2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
In a paper published last month, Stanford University researchers
examined a sample of posts on Twitter and Meta Platforms' Facebook
that altogether contained 78 misleading claims about the 2020
election. They found that Twitter and Facebook both consistently
applied labels to only about 70% of the claims.
In a statement, Twitter said it has taken numerous steps in recent
months to "elevate reliable resources" about primaries and voting
processes.
Twitter's efforts to fight misinformation during the midterms will
include information prompts to debunk falsehoods before they spread
widely online.
More emphasis should be placed on removing false and misleading
posts, said Yosef Getachew, media and democracy program director at
nonpartisan group Common Cause.
"Pointing them to other sources isn’t enough," he said.
Experts also questioned Twitter's practice of leaving up some tweets
from world leaders in the name of public interest.
"Twitter has a responsibility and ability to stop misinformation at
the source," Feeney said, saying that world leaders and politicians
should face a higher standard for what they tweet.
Twitter leads the industry in releasing data on how its efforts to
intervene against misinformation are working, said Evelyn Douek, an
assistant professor at Stanford Law School who studies online speech
regulation.
Yet more than a year after soliciting public input on what the
company should do when a world leader violates its rules, Twitter
has not provided an update, she said.
(Reporting by Sheila Dang in Dallas; Editing by Howard Goller and
Leslie Adler)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|