The Niagara Falls Review

Twitter testing ‘hide’ feature in Canada

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OTTAWA — Twitter launched an experiment in Canada Thursday to give users in this country the ability to hide replies to tweets on its social media platform, in a bid, the company says, to give users more control over conversati­ons.

The timing comes as social media platforms like Twitter have faced increasing government pressure to police their services better, particular­ly ahead of this fall’s federal election, and amid concerns of the vitriol spewed at some users — particular­ly female politician­s.

Users outside Canada will be able to see the feature and be affected when it’s used, but won’t be able to use it themselves.

The platform will indicate on a tweet any time a user decides to hide replies and will allow users to see what’s been hidden as a way to dissuade brands or politician­s from overusing the feature.

The company chose to test the new option in Canada before rolling it out elsewhere. Twitter isn’t putting a timeline on when the experiment will end.

The feature is different from muting — where users can avoid seeing content from certain accounts, hashtags, and replies, for example — and blocking, where a user is prevented from seeing tweets or interactin­g with one account.

Michele Austin, head of government and public policy at Twitter Canada, said the platform designed the feature for “when a reply goes sideways,” but a user still wants that person have access to their tweets.

“Twitter is public, and it’s transparen­t and it happens in real-time,” Austin said.

“What we’re experiment­ing with — and this is an experiment — is giving users more control to have a conversati­on that they’re seeking while at the same time keeping that transparen­cy, so if they choose to moderate a reply and hide it, others will have access to it.”

Austin said the feature is about the “health of the conversati­on” on the platform, and could be made available to all users, depending on the feedback.

The experiment tries to balance the experience some politician­s, among other users, have with “trolls” on the platform, and concerns about freedom of speech when an elected official moves to block someone from reading their tweets.

Last fall, Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson backed down from blocking his political critics from reading his Twitter feed after several went to court claiming he had violated their constituti­onal right to know what a public office-holder was saying. It was the first case of its kind in Canada.

In the United States, an appeals court ruled on Tuesday that U.S. President Donald Trump, an avid Twitter user, couldn’t block users for similar reasons under the U.S. Constituti­on. That ruling sparked two more lawsuits against Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for blocking users from her Twitter account.

 ?? MATT ROURKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Twitter says it has launched an experiment in Canada that allows users in this country to hide replies to tweets on the social media platform.
MATT ROURKE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Twitter says it has launched an experiment in Canada that allows users in this country to hide replies to tweets on the social media platform.

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