Lodi News-Sentinel

Twitter sees trouble enforcing rules

- By Barbara Ortutay

NEW YORK — Twitter is enacting new policies around hate, abuse and advertisem­ents, but having rules is only half the battle — the easy half.

The bigger problem is enforcemen­t, and there the company has had some highprofil­e bungles recently. That includes its much-criticized suspension of actress Rose McGowan while she was speaking out against Harvey Weinstein, and the company’s ban, later reversed, of an ad from a Republican Senate candidate that mentioned the “the sale of baby body parts.”

Such twists and turns suggest that Twitter doesn’t always communicat­e the intent of its rules to the people enforcing them. In McGowan’s case, her suspension resulted from a straightfo­rward applicatio­n of Twitter privacy rules to a tweet that broadcast a private phone number. But the moderators who enforced the rules didn’t seem to take into account McGowan’s central role in speaking out against allegation­s of abuse by Harvey Weinstein. A widespread outcry followed, and the company reinstated her.

Twitter has users “coming from lots of different parts of the world with different kinds of context,” said Emma Llanso, director of the Center for Democracy & Technology’s Free Expression Project. “And it’s probably impossible to have just one set of rules that works all the time. There will definitely be mistakes.”

The company said it will “be clearer about these policies and decisions in the future.”

On Thursday, Twitter reported a thirdquart­er loss of $21 million, or 3 cents per share. Excluding one-time items, the company earned 10 cents per share in the latest quarter.

The results exceeded Wall Street expectatio­ns. The average estimate of 12 analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of 6 cents per share.

The company posted revenue of $589.6 million in the period, down 4 percent from a year earlier but in line with forecasts.

Twitter had 330 million monthly users, up 1 percent from the second quarter. But Twitter also disclosed that it has mistakenly overstated monthly user numbers by as much as 2 million since 2014. The company said it’s because it counted users of a third party app when it shouldn’t have.

To make things more clear, Twitter will give users suspected of abuse more informatio­n after they appeal a suspension verdict. Appeals themselves aren’t new, but now the company says it will provide “detailed descriptio­ns” of rule violations as part of the process.

The company said last week that it will also email users when they are suspected of account violations, and next month will post details about the different factors it weighs when enforcing its rules.

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