Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bad week in social media gets worse

- BY BARBARA ORTUTAY

Cracking down on hate, abuse and online trolls also is hurting Twitter’s standing with investors.

The company’s stock plunged Friday after it reported a decline in its monthly users and warned the number could fall further in the coming months. The 20.5 percent plunge came one day after Facebook lost 19 percent of its value in a single day.

Twitter said it’s putting the longterm stability of its platform above user growth. That leaves investors seemingly unable to value what the biggest companies in the sector, which rely on potential user reach, are worth.

Twitter had 335 million monthly users in the quarter, below the 339 million Wall Street was expecting, and down slightly from 336 million in the first quarter. That overshadow­ed a strong monthly user growth of 3 percent compared with the previous year.

The company said its monthly user number could continue to fall in the “mid-single-digit millions” in the third quarter.

While Friday was Twitter’s second-worst loss since it went public in November 2013, the stock has still doubled in value over the last 12 months.

Long criticized for allowing bad behavior to run rampant on its platform, Twitter has begun to crack down, banning accounts that violate its terms and making others less visible.

Twitter now is attempting to rein in the worst offenders after years as one of the Wild West corners of the internet.

At the same time, it must convince people it’s the go-to platform in social media, even though it is dwarfed by Facebook.

Facebook has more than 2.23 billion users while its apps WhatsApp, Instagram and Messenger each have more than 1 billion.

Twitter on Friday reiterated its efforts to “to invest in improving the health of the public conversati­on” on its platform, making the “longterm health” of its service a priority over short-term metrics such as user numbers.

As part of these efforts, Twitter said as of May, its systems identified and challenged more than 9 million accounts per week that are potentiall­y spam or automated, up from 6.4 million in December 2017. The company has previously disclosed these numbers.

A Washington Post report put the

total number of suspended accounts in May and June at 70 million. The Associated Press also found that Twitter suspended 56 million such accounts in the last quarter of 2017. While Twitter maintains most of these accounts were dormant and thus not counted in the monthly user figure, the company also warned its cleanup efforts could affect its counted user base without giving specific numbers.

“We want people to feel safe freely expressing themselves and have launched new tools to address problem behaviors that distort and distract from the public conversati­on,” CEO Jack Dorsey said in a prepared statement.

Twitter’s market value dropped by more than $6 billion Friday, to around $26 billion. Investors still value Facebook at $503 billion. Facebook lost $119 billion in value on Thursday.

Twitter’s second-quarter net income hit $100.1 million, after a loss last year during the same period. It’s the company’s third profit in a row, the third it has ever posted.

Per-share, the San Francisco company’s net income was 13 cents, or 17 cents adjusted, in line with expectatio­ns, according to a poll by Zacks Investment Research.

Revenue of $710.5 million was up 24 percent and edged out expectatio­ns of $696 million.

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