Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Twitter going after QAnon postings

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Kate Conger of The New York Times and by Zen Soo of The Associated Press.

OAKLAND, Calif. — Twitter has removed thousands of accounts that spread messages about the conspiracy theories known as QAnon, saying their messages could lead to harm and violated Twitter policy.

Twitter said late Tuesday that it also would block trends related to the loose network of QAnon conspiracy theories from appearing in its trending topics and search, as well as blocking URLs associated with it from being posted on the platform. Twitter also said that it would stop highlighti­ng and recommendi­ng tweets associated with QAnon.

“We’ve been clear that we will take strong enforcemen­t action on behavior that has the potential to lead to offline harm,” the company said in a tweet late Tuesday.

It was the first time a social media service has taken sweeping action to remove content affiliated with QAnon, which has become increasing­ly popular on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.

Facebook is preparing to take similar steps to limit the reach of QAnon content on its platform, said two Facebook employees with knowledge of the plans, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The company has been coordinati­ng with Twitter and other social media companies and plans to make an announceme­nt next month, the employees said. Facebook declined to comment.

‘Q’ FOLLOWERS

The QAnon conspiracy theory is centered on the belief

that President Donald Trump is waging a secret campaign against enemies in the “deep state” and a child-sex traffickin­g ring run by satanic pedophiles and cannibals. For more than two years, followers have pored over tangled clues purportedl­y posted online by a high-ranking government official known only as “Q.”

“Q” claims to have access to government secrets that reveal a plot against Trump and his supporters. That supposedly classified informatio­n was initially posted on message boards before spreading to mainstream internet platforms and has led to significan­t online harassment as well as physical violence.

Trump has retweeted QAnon-promoting accounts and its followers show up at his rallies wearing clothes and hats with QAnon symbols and slogans.

“QAnon is not convention­al political discourse,” Alice Marwick, an associate professor of communicat­ion at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “It’s a conspiracy theory that

makes wild claims and baseless accusation­s about political actors and innocent people alike.”

Over several weeks, Twitter has removed 7,000 accounts that posted QAnon material, a company spokeswoma­n said. The accounts had been increasing­ly active and had been involved in coordinate­d harassment campaigns on Twitter or tried to evade a previous suspension by setting up new accounts after an old account was deleted.

An additional 150,000 accounts will be hidden from trends and search on Twitter, the spokeswoma­n added. The takedowns were reported earlier by NBC News.

“These accounts amplify and enable networked harassment on a level that’s clearly against the Twitter terms of service,” Marwick said. “But this won’t stop QAnon from operating. It’s multiplatf­orm and really good at adapting as media ecosystems change.”

In May, Facebook removed a cluster of five pages, 20 Facebook accounts and six groups affiliated with QAnon, saying they had violated its policy against coordinate­d inauthenti­c behavior.

CONSERVATI­VE FOES, HACKERS

Since it became a venue for disinforma­tion during the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election, Twitter has cracked down on content that spreads false informatio­n or encourages harassment. In February, it introduced a ban against manipulate­d photos and videos, a popular method of tricking viewers and spreading disinforma­tion. And in May, it began labeling some of Trump’s tweets, saying they contained false informatio­n or promoted violence.

Twitter’s aggressive enforcemen­t actions have put it on a collision course with Trump, who has said that Twitter is unfairly silencing conservati­ve voices and has encouraged regulators to crack down on the service. While the QAnon ban was applauded in many circles, some conservati­ves said Twitter’s move was further evidence that the company unevenly enforced its rules against Trump’s supporters.

The political attention has added to Twitter’s headaches. A wide-ranging hack last week compromise­d the Twitter accounts of Democratic political figures, including former Vice President Joe

Biden and former President Barack Obama. Twitter also faces concerns that advertiser­s are tightening spending during the coronaviru­s pandemic. It is expected to report its second-quarter earnings this week.

More than two years after QAnon emerged on the internet, supporters of the movement, which the FBI has labeled a potential domestic terrorism threat, are trickling into the mainstream of the Republican Party. Precisely how many candidates, mostly Republican­s, are running under the QAnon banner is unclear. Some estimates put the number at a dozen, and few are expected to win in November.

A number of the candidates have sought to spread a core tenet of the QAnon conspiracy: that Trump ran for office to save Americans from a so-called deep state filled with child-abusing, devil-worshippin­g bureaucrat­s. According to QAnon, backing the president’s enemies are prominent Democrats who, in some telling, extract hormones from children’s blood.

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