The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Twitter hammered in abuse report

More than 1.1 million abusive or problemati­c tweets sent to women.

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NEW YORK — A report on Twitter by the human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal is gaining traction and the company’s shares were punished Thursday, suffering one of their worst declines this year.

The report released this week said the social media platform has permitted a toxic online culture that allows pervasive abuse of women.

While reports from Amnesty Internatio­nal are not regular reading on Wall Street, the Citron Research newsletter is.

On Thursday, Citron editor Andrew Left cited the report and called Twitter the “Harvey Weinstein” of social media.

Shares of Twitter Inc. closed down 11 percent Thursday.

Amnesty and data firm Element AI scoured through 288,000 tweets sent to almost 800 women politician­s and journalist­s in 2017.

Element calculated that 1.1 million abusive or problemati­c tweets were sent to those women last year, or, Amnesty said, about one every 30 seconds.

Researcher­s found that women of color were much more likely, 34 percent, to be the subject of problemati­c tweets.

Vijaya Gadde, the legal, policy, trust and safety global lead at Twitter, said in a response to Amnesty that the company desires a healthy and transparen­t discourse.

“Twitter’s health is measured by how we help encourage more healthy debate, conversati­ons, and critical thinking,” Gadde said. “Conversely, abuse, malicious automation, and manipulati­on detract from the health of Twitter. We are committed to holding ourselves publicly accountabl­e towards progress in this regard.”

After weeks of castigatio­n at Facebook over now well-known privacy issues, investors have grown leery of issues that have the potential to become a public nightmare for social media platforms.

Left, of Citron Research, lowered his expectatio­ns on company shares, anticipati­ng a difficult path for Twitter in light of heightened attention to the problems in social media.

Left said that said Twitter has become “uninvestab­le” and that advertiser­s will soon have to reconsider their sponsorshi­ps on the platform.

Twitter, like Facebook, has also come under fire for its role in false and divisive messages spreading on its platform. Both social media companies on Thursday said they suspended or shut down accounts suspected of spreading false informatio­n about the Bangladesh opposition days before the national elections.

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