Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Demands for user info on rise, Twitter warns

Government­s globally are asking company to remove content or snoop on accounts

- By Amanda Seitz

Twitter warned Thursday that government­s around the globe are asking the company to remove content or snoop on private details of user accounts at an alarming rate.

The San Francisco-based social media company revealed in a new report that it fielded a record number of legal demands — nearly 60,000 during a sixmonth period last year — from local, state or national government­s that wanted Twitter to remove content from accounts or reveal confidenti­al informatio­n such as direct messages or user locations.

“We're seeing government­s become more aggressive in how they try to use legal tactics to unmask the people using our service, collect informatio­n about account owners and also using legal demands as a way to try and silence people,” Yoel Roth, the head of Twitter's safety and integrity, said in a conversati­on broadcast on the site Thursday.

The U.S. makes up the majority of demands for account informatio­n, accounting for 20% of the requests. India follows closely behind. Twitter says it complied fully with roughly 40% of all asks for informatio­n on user accounts.

Japan, which is also a frequent requestor for account informatio­n, makes the most requests of Twitter to take down content from accounts. Japan made more than 23,000 requests — half of all requests — for content to be removed. Russia followed closely behind on its takedown asks.

Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, also reported an increase in government asks for private user data during the same time frame.

Twitter also reported a huge spike in requests from government­s that targeted verified journalist­s and news outlets during the last half of 2021.

Government­s also made a record number of legal demands on 349 accounts of verified journalist­s or news outlets around the globe between July and December of last year — a 103% increase.

Twitter did not provide a breakdown of which countries made those requests on journalist­s' accounts or how many of the asks they complied with.

Government­s are using the social media companies to silence critics and censor journalist­s, Rob Mahoney, the executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, said in an emailed statement to The Associated Press.

“This surge in government demands for content takedowns and informatio­n on journalist­s is part of a global trend of increasing censorship and manipulati­on of informatio­n,” Mahoney said. “Social media platforms are vital for reporters and they must do more to resist government attempts to silence critical voices.”

 ?? GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The U.S. makes up the majority of demands for Twitter account informatio­n, accounting for 20% of the requests.
GREGORY BULL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The U.S. makes up the majority of demands for Twitter account informatio­n, accounting for 20% of the requests.

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