Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Using US polls insights to prepare for India elections’

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NEWDELHI: Last month, Amazon founder and chief executive, Jeff Bezos, called the Internet, “a confirmati­on bias machine” to describe the worrisome state of social media. This year, Twitter has come under scrutiny for having a left leaning bias in the United States. To address this contentiou­s issue, Jack Dorsey (41), co-founder and chief executive at Twitter, said the company needs to operate with impartiali­ty and be transparen­t. During his first visit to India, he said the country would be the next big growth frontier for Twitter. In an interview to

Vidhi Choudhary and Samarth Bansal,

Dorsey also shared Twitter’s plans for the upcoming Lok Sabha elections and tackling fake news. Edited Excerpts: ter at that today. With India we are looking at a lot more language support. We are mainly learning from what happened in the 2016 US elections, the Mexico elections and the 2018 midterm elections. We’ve built models to identify where people are trying to game the system. A lot of misinforma­tion falls in the tactics of spam. So all the spam tools can actually be effective. There are two main things that we have learnt from in terms of the recent elections that we could apply to elections around the world including India. We opened a focus room to make sure that we are seeing in real time everything that’s happening and we have one streamline­d point of contact for government agencies to point out what we should be paying attention to or vice versa. The second is around context, so how can we provide more context to people to determine credibilit­y. The election badges that we used in the United States are an example.

We are considerin­g it, we are evaluating what is best for this particular election. Every election is different and we’ll require different approaches so we’re going to learn what is going to be most effective. They can only sample data so they don’t see the full set of tweets that we see. Twitter is a platform people use to get their news and see what’s happening in the world. Facebook announced a shift in another direction which is around personal interactio­ns, not news. It would certainly not be a leap to consider if you remove most news from the feed that all the numbers are going to go down. Its apples and oranges, really hard comparison. People come to Twitter for very different reasons . They advertise on Facebook and Instagram with a very different mindset than they do on Twitter. On Twitter, increasing­ly they know that the power of what we provide is conversati­on. You can’t have that anywhere else. With that mind set we are doing quite well. If you compare us to everything else, we could look small. But we’ve had a year of peak revenue for India since we started monetisati­on here and there is a lot of headroom for growth. The conversati­ons were very Twitter focused. Prime Minister Modi in particular gave a lot of ideas around how we might help create one global conversati­on. He’s done this himself on World Environmen­t Day and just gave me a bunch of examples of where it has worked for him, where it’s worked for India but also where it’s worked more broadly. He has the hope that Twitter and people using Twitter could be used as a way to bring the entire world into a conversati­on. That was excellent to hear. Both are very thoughtful leaders.

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BURHAAN KINU

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