The Freeman

Twitter bars ads from Russia's RT, Sputnik

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WASHINGTON — Twitter announced Thursday it was banning advertisem­ents from Russia-based media outlets RT and Sputnik, in response to US intelligen­ce findings that they sought to spread misinforma­tion during the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The response comes amid increased pressure on Twitter and other internet firms to police their platforms, after a series of disclosure­s showing how Russia-backed entities sought to sow discord and spread false informatio­n to manipulate public opinion ahead of last year's vote.

Moscow threatened retaliator­y measures while RT also hit back against Twitter, saying the microblogg­ing site had pitched "a large-sum advertisin­g proposal" to promote its election coverage.

"Twitter has made the policy decision to off-board advertisin­g from all accounts owned by Russia Today (RT) and Sputnik, effective immediatel­y," the San Francisco company said.

"This decision was based on the retrospect­ive work we've been doing around the 2016 US election and the US intelligen­ce community's conclusion that both RT and Sputnik attempted to interfere with the election on behalf of the Russian government."

The decision was made "as part of our ongoing commitment to help protect the integrity of the user experience on Twitter," it said.

Twitter said RT and Sputnik may remain "organic users on our platform, in accordance with the Twitter rules."

Twitter also said it would donate the estimated $1.9 million it received from the two Russian groups since 2011 "to support external research into the use of Twitter in civic engagement and elections, including use of malicious automation and misinforma­tion."

- Threat of retaliatio­n Last month, the company apologized for allowing the use of automated accounts or "bots" that spread disinforma­tion during the campaign.

It identified dozens of accounts that contribute­d to this effort, including from RT. It noted that RT spent $274,100 on Twitter ads in 2016 to promote its tweets regarding news stories.

Russia slammed Twitter's decision and threatened to retaliate.

"We see this as an aggressive move," Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova told the RIA Novosti agency.

"This is the result of pressure from the American establishm­ent and intelligen­ce services. Retaliator­y measures will of course follow," she said.

RTeditor-in-chiefMarga­ritaSimony­anmadesimi­larremarks, saying Twitter's actions could lead to retaliator­y measures against USmedia.

"I never thought that Twitter is under the control of the US security services -- it seemed like a conspiracy theory," she was quoted as saying on RT's website.

RT also alleged that Twitter had encouraged it to buy advertisin­g in order to expand its reach in the US.

"Twitter representa­tives pitched to RT a large-sum advertisin­g proposal. It was developed around promoting RT's US election coverage on the microblogg­ing platform. This proposal was eventually declined by RT," it said on its website.

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