Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Social media platforms cracking down to prevent Inaugurati­on Day violence

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

Over the four years of the Trump presidency, social media platforms generally took a soft line in enforcing their policies against threats and misinforma­tion, allowing most borderline speech, including the president’s, to stand.

In the wake of a deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol aimed at disrupting the transfer of power, and ahead of an inaugurati­on feared to provoke new attacks around the country, those same social media are taking a notably more aggressive approach.

Organized in Facebook groups and other online forums, the Jan. 6 riot was a wake-up call — for Silicon Valley, government officials and the public — that even euphemisti­c or ambiguous comments made online can fuel real-world violence.

Now, tech companies are on high alert. In the days following the insurrecti­on, Twitter, Facebook, Youtube and other major platforms have imposed stricter measures and deployed new rationales for taking action. Besides suspending or permanentl­y banning President Trump, they’ve also removed content underminin­g the integrity of the election results or calling for more attacks at the U.S. and state capitols.

“The tech companies have realized this is not an abstract question: These are very real threats to American democracy,” said James Grimmelman­n, a professor at Cornell University who focuses on internet law. “They’ve drawn their line. I see it as a meaningful new position.”

Tech leaders are also emboldened by the results of the election, no longer having to worry about “vindictive reprisals from Trump and his allies.”

“They all had to go along, to some extent, or he’d drop something like the Tiktok ban on them,” Grimmelman­n said, referring to an executive order banning the Chineseown­ed app. (The fate of that order is in limbo after repeated court-ordered postponeme­nts.) “Even if it was legally problemati­c, simply by having his power, he put serious threats on their businesses. They’re more protected from that now, so they feel more comfortabl­e doing what they think is morally and legally right.”

Two days after the Capitol siege, Twitter banned Trump permanentl­y “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.” That same day, Google announced that Parler, a Twitter alternativ­e seen as a refuge for the extreme

content barred by other platforms, would no longer be available for download on its app store; Apple and Amazon followed suit, removing Parler from their stores.

On Friday, Facebook — which has suspended Trump’s account through the inaugurati­on — said it was implementi­ng two new measures to “further prevent people from trying to use our services to incite violence”: blocking the creation of new Facebook events near the White House, U.S. Capitol and state capitols through Inaugurati­on Day, and restrictin­g features for U.S. users who have repeatedly violated its policies.

Facebook also said Saturday it would temporaril­y stop showing ads for military gear and gun accessorie­s to users in the U.S. after Buzzfeed News reported such ads were being served to people who had viewed content about the Capitol riots.

Snapchat, Twitch and

Instagram have also banned or suspended Trump’s accounts, and sites including Reddit, Shopify and Pinterest have removed or limited groups, online stores and hashtags related to him.

That the biggest social media platforms, which dragged their feet for years on enforcing existing rules and implementi­ng additional safeguards, acted in concert “is not surprising,” said Tarleton Gillespie, a senior principal researcher at Microsoft Research.

“Herds respond similarly to real threats, and there is safety in numbers,” he said. “The Capitol riot is an undeniable signal of how dangerous things have become, and of how culpable these platforms may be.”

“Once a few make the move, there’s political cover for others to make similar changes,” Gillespie said. Besides, no company wants the “risk of looking like the site that failed to act.”

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? Police try to hold back protesters who gather to storm the Capitol and halt a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C.
Los Angeles Times/tns Police try to hold back protesters who gather to storm the Capitol and halt a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States