APC Australia

Australian eSafety Commission warns Twitter

Musk continues to drag Twitter through the mud.

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Twitter remains in decline – and it seems things have become so bad that government interventi­on has sprouted up. Australia’s online safety regulator has sent a legal notice to Twitter, demanding the platform explain and outline its steps to combat hate speech or risk being fined.

The letter, from eSafety Commission­er Jule Inman Grant, highlights that “We are seeing a worrying surge in hate online” and that “Twitter appears to have dropped the ball on tackling hate”. She further adds that a third of all the complaints received by the eSafety Commission are from Twitter, with reports increasing since Musk took ownership of the company back in October 2022.

The letter gives Twitter 28 days to respond or face fines of $700,00 (about US$475,000). Inman Grant notes in the letter that increased reports of hate speech specifical­ly began shortly after Musk slashed the social media giant’s moderation staff and reinstated thousands of previously banned accounts, including infamous influencer Andrew Tate.

The lack of moderation staff on the platform has led to an influx of hateful conduct and abuse. When you couple that with Musk’s less-than-ideal potential features, it’s hard to deny that the app is becoming less attractive – or just effectivel­y unusable – for a lot of people.

Hate speech surged once Musk took over, and while he has appointed a new CEO in the apparent hopes of stepping back, it seems like Musk can’t help but make clear who is really in charge.

When replacemen­t CEO Linda Yaccarino was appointed, Musk made it clear that he would continue to head product design and new technology while Yaccarino would focus on business operations. We can’t help but wonder if Elon Musk has set the new CEO up to fail: a quick fix that ensures he can carry on spreading controvers­y (like recently calling the word ‘cis’ and ‘cisgender’ a slur that won’t be tolerated on Twitter) that someone else then has to deal with.

Yaccarino takes on the mess after Musk tanked more than half the social media platform’s value since purchasing it in November. Twitter has run through controvers­y after controvers­y since that point.

"Hate speech surged once Musk took over, and while he has appointed a new CEO in the apparent hopes of stepping back, it seems like Musk can’t help but make clear who is really in charge."

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