Hartford Courant

Twitter tightens measures on candidates

- By Barbara Ortutay

OAKLAND, Calif. — Twitter is imposing tough new rules that restrict candidates from declaring premature victory and tighten its measures against spreading misinforma­tion, calling for political violence and spreading thoughtles­s commentary in the days leading up to and following the Nov. 3 U.S. election.

The social platform will remove tweets that encourage violence or call for people to interfere with election results. Tweets that falsely claim a candidate has won will be labeled to direct users to the official U.S. election results page on Twitter.

Twitter said Friday it is will also make it more difficult to retweet posts it has labeled to highlight the presence of misleading informatio­n — whether about COVID, civic integrity or for including manipulate­d photos or videos. Beginning next week, people who want to retweet such posts will see a prompt pointing them to credible informatio­n about the topic. The step is designed to make people pause and think, potentiall­y slowing thoughtles­s retweets that are often a problem on the platform.

Beginning Oct. 20, and at least through Election Week in the U.S., Twitter says it will also encourage people to add their own commentary to retweets. People who try to retweet someone else’s post will first be directed to the “quote tweet” feature, which lets them add their own comment.

The San Francisco company is also placing tighter limits on politician­s with more than 100,000 followers, a category that includes President Donald Trump with 87 million and his Democratic rival, Joe Biden, with 10 million. If these users tweet misleading informatio­n, the tweets will get a label saying the informatio­n is disputed. Anyone who wants to see the tweets will have to tap through the warning; even then, they won’t be able to like, retweet or comment on it.

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