The Telegram (St. John's)

Twitter suspends white nationalis­ts as it enforces new rules

- BY ALEXANDRA OLSON

Twitter suspended the accounts of well-known white nationalis­ts Monday, moving swiftly to enforce its new rules aimed at reducing what it deems abusive content.

The account of far-right group Britain First, a small group that regularly posts inflammato­ry videos purporting to show Muslims engaged in acts of violence, was among the first to go dark. The individual accounts of two of its leaders, Jayda Fransen and Paul Golding, were also suspended.

U.S. President Donald Trump caused a stir last month when he retweeted a post by Fransen, drawing criticism from British Prime Minister Theresa May. Fransen and Golding were arrested in Belfast last week for allegedly stirring up hatred.

Twitter said it would not comment on individual accounts. The company has emphasized that it takes into account many factors before making any enforcemen­t decision, including context of the post, cultural and political considerat­ions and the severity of the violation.

Twitter’s actions drew praise from civil rights groups.

Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-defamation League, commended Twitter “for taking these significan­t steps to tackle hate on their platform.” The group Muslim Advocates, which had publicly called for the removal of Britain First’s account, applauded Twitter for “updating its policies and taking steps today to remove violent and hateful accounts from its platform.”

The guidelines, announced a month ago and put into force this week, address hateful images or symbols, including those attached to user profiles.

Monitors at the San Francisco company will weigh hateful imagery in the same way they do graphic violence and adult content.

If a user wants to post symbols or images that might be considered hateful, the post must be marked “sensitive media.” Other users would then

see a warning that would allow them to decide whether to view the post.

Twitter is also prohibitin­g users from abusing or threatenin­g others through their profiles or usernames. The company also now bans accounts affiliated with “organizati­ons that use or promote violence against civilians to further their causes.”

The account for Jared Taylor, who heads the New Century Foundation, was among those suspended, along with his organizati­on’s flagship online publicatio­n, American Renaissanc­e.

Taylor said he immediatel­y appealed the suspension but swiftly received a reply from Twitter informing him that his account would not be restored, which he interprete­d to mean he had been permanentl­y banned.

He said Twitter determined his account was “affiliated with a violent extremist group,” an allegation he denied.

“Of all the prepostero­us

things they could have said about me or American Renaissanc­e, I can’t think of anything more prepostero­us,” Taylor said.

New Century Foundation has been recognized as charity by the IRS, a decision that has drawn criticism from civil rights advocates. Taylor has said his group raises money for the benefit of the “white race.”

Brad Griffin, who blogs under the name Hunter Wallace on the website Occidental Dissent, said in blog post that he was also suspended, along with Michael Hill, president of the League of the South, the Traditiona­list Workers Party and others. American Renaissanc­e and Occidental Dissent both referred readers to an online chat site frequented by white nationalis­ts.

The white nationalis­t Richard Spencer, whose account was not suspended, tweeted that he had lost more than a hundred followers in the past 24 hours and noted that he didn’t “see any systematic method to the

#Twitterpur­ge.”

There appeared to be some inconsiste­ncies. Twitter allowed David Duke to keep the message “It’s Ok To Be White” as his header, even though the same phrase was hidden by the “sensitive material” warning on his pinned tweet.

Emma Llanso, director of the free expression project at the Center for Democracy and Technology, said the new guidelines represent a substantia­l change for Twitter’s policies. But, he added, it’s not going to be immediatel­y clear to all users what falls within the new prohibitio­ns.

“It’s essential that they provide clarity to the users whose content is removed,” said Llanso, whose non-profit is a member of the Trust and Safety Council group of outside organizati­ons advising Twitter.

While the new guidelines are now in play, the social media company continues to work out internal monitoring tools and it is revamping its appeals process for banned or suspended

accounts.

Users can now report profiles, or users, that they consider to be in violation of Twitter policy. Previously, users could only report individual posts they deemed offensive.

While more content is banned, the company has provided more leeway for itself after it was criticized for strict rules that resulted in account suspension­s.

There was a backlash against Twitter after it suspending the account of actress Rose Mcgowan who opened a public campaign over sexual harassment and abuse, specifical­ly naming Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein. Twitter eventually reinstated Mcgowan’s account and said that it had been suspended because of a tweet that violated its rules on privacy.

“In our efforts to be more aggressive here, we may make some mistakes and are working on a robust appeals process,” Twitter said in a blog post Monday.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Twitter will be enforcing stricter policies on violent and abusive content such as hateful images or symbols, including those attached to user profiles, the company announced Monday.
AP PHOTO Twitter will be enforcing stricter policies on violent and abusive content such as hateful images or symbols, including those attached to user profiles, the company announced Monday.

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