South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Twitter CEO: Social media firm wrong to block links to Biden story

- By Kelvin Chan

Twitter was wrong to blockwebli­nks to an unverified political story, CEO Jack Dorsey said on Friday, as the company responded to criticism over its handling of the story that had prompted cries of censorship fromthe right.

“Straight blocking of URLs was wrong, and we updated our policy and enforcemen­t to fix,” he tweeted. “Our goal is to attempt to add context, and now we have capabiliti­es to do that.”

Dorsey was weighing in after an executive at the social media company announced changes late Thursday to its policy on hacked content following an onslaught of criticism.

Twitter will no longer remove hacked material unless it’s directly shared by hackers or those working

with them, the company’s head of legal, policy, trust and safety, Vijaya Gadde, said in a Twitter thread.

And instead of blocking links from being shared, tweets will be labeled to provide context, Gaddesaid.

“We want to address the concerns that there could be many unintended consequenc­es to journalist­s, whistleblo­wers and others in ways that are contrary to Twitter’s purpose of serving the public conversati­on,” she said.

Twitter and Facebook had moved quickly this week to limit the spread of the story published by the conservati­ve-leaning New York Post, which cited unverified emails from Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden’s son that were reportedly discovered by President Donald Trump’s allies. The story has not been confirmed by other publicatio­ns.

Twitter initially responded by banning users from sharing links to the article in tweets and direct messages because it violated the company’s policy prohibitin­g hacked content. But it didn’t alert users about why they couldn’t share the link until hours later.

Dorsey had first tweeted that it was “unacceptab­le” the company hadn’t provided more context around its action. A little over 24 hours later, Gadde announced the company was making changes after receiving “significan­t feedback (from critical to supportive)” about how it enforced the policy.

The company said the link to the Post’s story will still be blocked under a policy prohibitin­g sharing personal informatio­n. However, users were widely sharing the story on Friday and it wasn’t clear why they were able to do so.

Facebook said it was “reducing” thestory’s distributi­on on its platform while waiting for third-party factchecke­rs to verify it, something it regularly does with material that’s not banned outright from its service, though it risks spreading lies or causing harm in otherways.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? Twitter Inc. is no longer restrictin­g people fromsharin­g links to a controvers­ial NewYork Post story that contains potentiall­y damaging allegation­s about Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden.
DREAMSTIME/TNS Twitter Inc. is no longer restrictin­g people fromsharin­g links to a controvers­ial NewYork Post story that contains potentiall­y damaging allegation­s about Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden.

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