Twitter: 300,000 tweets flagged over election disinformation
 
 
The CEO of Twitter says the social media site
flagged some 300,000 tweets as part of efforts to combat disinformation in the
period around the 2020 election between President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe
Biden.
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Facebook CEO Mark
Zuckerberg are testifying Tuesday at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
called to question their companies’ actions around the closely contested
election.
The senators are deeply divided by party over the
integrity and results of the election itself.
Prominent Republican senators — including the
Judiciary Committee chairman, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina — have
refused to knock down Trump’s unfounded claims of voting irregularities and
fraud, even as misinformation disputing Biden’s victory has flourished online.
Graham, a close Trump ally, has publicly urged: “Do
not concede, Mr. President. Fight hard.”
Zuckerberg and Dorsey promised lawmakers last month
that they would aggressively guard their platforms from being manipulated by
foreign governments or used to incite violence around the election results —
and they followed through with high-profile steps that angered Trump and his
supporters.
Twitter and Facebook have both slapped a
misinformation label on some content from Trump, most notably his assertions
linking voting by mail to fraud. On Monday, Twitter flagged Trump’s tweet
proclaiming “I won the Election!” with this note: “Official sources called this
election differently.”
In his written testimony for the hearing, Dorsey
said, “We applied labels to add context and limit the risk of harmful election
misinformation spreading without important context, because the public told us
they wanted us to take these steps.”
Between Oct. 27 and Nov. 11, he said, about 300,000
tweets were labeled for content that was disputed and potentially misleading,
representing 0.2% of all U.S. election-related tweets sent during the period.
Of the labeled tweets, 456 also were covered by a warning message and were
limited in how they could be shared. About 74% of the people who viewed those
tweets saw them after a label or warning message was applied.
Facebook also moved two days after the election to
ban a large group called “Stop the Steal” that Trump supporters were using to
organize protests against the vote count. The 350,000-member group echoed
Trump’s baseless allegations of a rigged election rendering the results
invalid.
For days after the election as the vote counting
went on, copycat “Stop the Steal” groups were easily found on Facebook. As of
Monday, Facebook appeared to have made them harder to find, though it was still
possible to locate them, including some groups with thousands of members.
Warily eyeing how the companies wield their power to
filter speech and ideas, Trump and the Republicans accuse the social media
companies of anti-conservative bias. Democrats also criticize them, though for
different reasons. The result is that both parties are interested in stripping
away some of the protections that have shielded tech companies from legal
responsibility for what people post on their platforms. Biden has heartily
endorsed such an action.
But it’s the actions that companies have taken
around the election that are likely to be a dominant focus at Tuesday’s
hearing.
The GOP majority on the Judiciary panel threatened
Zuckerberg and Dorsey with subpoenas last month if they didn’t agree to
voluntarily testify for Tuesday’s hearing. Republicans on the Senate Commerce
Committee lambasted the two CEOs and Sundar Pichai, Google’s chief executive,
at a hearing last month for what they said was a pattern of silencing
conservative viewpoints while giving free rein to political actors from
countries like China and Iran.
Despite fears over security in the runup to Nov. 3
and social media companies bracing for the worst, the election turned out to be
the most secure in U.S. history, federal and state officials from both parties
say — repudiating Trump’s unsubstantiated claims of fraud.
Facebook insists it has learned its lesson from the
2016 election and is no longer a conduit for misinformation, voter suppression
and election disruption. This fall Facebook said it removed a small network of
accounts and pages linked to Russia’s Internet Research Agency, the “troll
factory” that has used social media accounts to sow political discord in the
U.S. since the 2016 election. Twitter suspended five related accounts.
But critical outsiders, as well as some of
Facebook’s own employees, say the company’s efforts to tighten its safeguards
remain insufficient, despite it having spent billions.
There’s no evidence that the social media giants are
biased against conservative news, posts or other material, or that they favor
one side of political debate over another, researchers have found. But
criticism of the companies’ policies, and their handling of disinformation tied
to the election, has come from Democrats as well as Republicans.
Democrats have focused their criticism mainly on
hate speech, misinformation and other content that can incite violence, keep
people from voting or spread falsehoods about the coronavirus. They criticize
the tech CEOs for failing to police content, blaming the platforms for playing
a role in hate crimes and the rise of white nationalism in the U.S. And that
criticism has extended to their efforts to stamp out false information related
to the election.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


