The Guardian Australia

Twitter to allow Australian users to flag potential misinforma­tion during month-long trial

- Christophe­r Knaus

Australian Twitter users will be allowed to report potentiall­y misleading content as part of a new experiment in monitoring misinforma­tion on the platform.

Twitter users from Wednesday will be able to flag tweets that seem misleading, via a new option on the platform’s content reporting mechanism.

The option to report misleading content is being trialled in three countries – the US, South Korea and Australia – for about a month.

The trial will allow Twitter to gather data and assess whether user reporting can usefully inform attempts to identify and curb misinforma­tion in real time.

Twitter also hopes it will be able to analyse the reported data to better understand the origins of misinforma­tion, identify it early, and take action before it snowballs out of control.

The system will face obvious difficulti­es. Concepts of “misleading content” and “misinforma­tion” can be broad and open to interpreta­tion, often according to political belief, Twitter says.

Reporting functions can also be misused or gamed to wrongly target users or specific content.

Twitter will also on Wednesday reactivate prompts in users’ timelines in 14 countries, including Australia, to give them country-specific Covid vaccine informatio­n.

The prompts direct users to country-specific Moments examining vaccine safety, effectiven­ess, distributi­on plans, and vaccine availabili­ty.

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Earlier this year, Facebook, Twitter and other tech giants adopted an industry code of practice designed to limit the spread of misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion.

The code, developed by industry organisati­on Digi, required signatorie­s to develop a process for identifyin­g, reviewing and removing misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion.

It faced immediate criticism for its weakness and opt-in nature, and the Australian government did not rule out taking tougher action against the tech giants if it failed to work.

“The Morrison government will be watching carefully to see whether this voluntary code is effective in providing safeguards against the serious harms that arise from the spread of disinforma­tion and misinforma­tion on digital platforms,” the communicat­ions minister, Paul Fletcher, said at the time.

The code was recommende­d by the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission’s digital platforms inquiry in 2019. The ACCC said the industry should either agree on a voluntary code to deal with disinforma­tion or face a mandatory code created by government.

“The ACCC is particular­ly concerned about the risk of consumers being exposed to serious incidents of disinforma­tion – false or inaccurate informatio­n deliberate­ly created to harm a person, social group, organisati­on or country,” the report said.

The draft code by industry initially focused on disinforma­tion but had since been expanded to also deal with misinforma­tion.

Twitter has taken steps to curb coronaviru­s misinforma­tion throughout the pandemic.

It developed a Covid-19 misleading informatio­n policy and has suspended high-profile users, including the Republican congresswo­man Marjorie Taylor Greene, for tweets suggesting that the coronaviru­s was not dangerous for nonobese people and those under 65 and that organisati­ons should not force “non-FDA” approved vaccines or masks on people. The tweets were labelled as “misleading”.

Recent data published by Twitter suggests that globally, since the start of the pandemic, it has challenged 11.7m accounts for Covid-19 content, suspended 1,711, and removed 49,612 pieces of content.

 ?? Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Twitter reporting protocol will face obvious difficulti­es. Concepts of ‘misleading content’ and ‘misinforma­tion’ can be broad and open to interpreta­tion.
Photograph: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images The Twitter reporting protocol will face obvious difficulti­es. Concepts of ‘misleading content’ and ‘misinforma­tion’ can be broad and open to interpreta­tion.

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