USA TODAY US Edition

Conservati­ves crying foul over Twitter bot purge

Social network claims it’s not about politics

- Jessica Guynn

SAN FRANCISCO – Conservati­ve Twitter users raged against the social media company, lobbing accusation­s of left-wing bias and censorship after thousands of followers were wiped out in an overnight bot purge.

The suspension of multiple accounts followed the indictment by special counsel Robert Mueller of Russian nationals for meddling in the U.S. election, including using fake accounts on Twitter to conduct “informatio­n warfare” against the U.S.

The hashtag #TwitterLoc­kOut was trending in the U.S. on Wednesday morning as thousands of accounts, including those belonging to Michael Flynn Jr., son of former national security adviser Michael Flynn, and Info

wars editor Paul Joseph Watson complained that hundreds, and in some cases thousands, of their followers had been shut down. “The twitter purge is real,” Fox News commentato­r Dan Bongino wrote. “I woke up and saw I lost 100 or so followers,” columnist Adriana Cohen tweeted.

Twitter would not say how many accounts it purged. “As part of our ongoing work in safety, we identify suspicious account behaviors that indicate automated activity or violations of our policies around having multiple accounts, or abuse,” Twitter said in a statement. “Twitter’s tools are apolitical, and we enforce our rules without political bias.”

Social media services have been struggling to eradicate fake or abusive content without appearing to censor opinions. Bots — accounts powered by automated software, not people — have plagued Twitter for years. Researcher­s estimate as many as 15% of accounts on Twitter could be fake. Twitter says that number is lower.

Until scrutiny of bots intensifie­d after the presidenti­al election, Twitter had little incentive to remove fake accounts that pad its user and growth numbers, critics say. Last month, Twitter shut down more than 1 million fake accounts uncovered by a New

York Times report. According to Twitter’s rules, automated software is permitted to tweet but is banned from posting misleading or abusive content or spam.

Fake accounts on Twitter have been traced to a Kremlin-linked “troll farm” accused of inflaming political divisions. According to researcher­s at the University of Southern California, conservati­ves retweeted Russian trolls about 31 times more than liberals and produced 36 times more tweets.

Cutting off bot-generated content is a pressing issue for Twitter, which needs to grow its user base and attract advertisin­g. Conservati­ve users and supporters of President Trump say Twitter deploys a double standard, unfairly singling out voices on the right.

 ?? THE MOTLEY FOOL ?? The hashtag #TwitterLoc­kOut was trending in the U.S. on Wednesday morning.
THE MOTLEY FOOL The hashtag #TwitterLoc­kOut was trending in the U.S. on Wednesday morning.

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