Business Day (Nigeria)

‘Toxic Twitter’ activists ramp up pressure on brands after Trump account reinstated

- (Reuters)

A COALITION of civil rights activists on Monday were urging Twitter’s advertiser­s to issue statements about pulling their ads off the social media platform after its owner Elon Musk lifted the ban on tweets by former U.S. President Donald Trump.

Trump’s account, which Twitter had suspended after the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021 citing the risk of further incitement of violence, was reinstated over the weekend. Some 90% of Twitter’s revenue comes from selling digital ads.

The groups in the Stop Toxic Twitter coalition complained that Musk had vowed to advertiser­s that Twitter would take a considered approach to reinstatin­g banned accounts and convene a new content moderation council. No such council has been created as of Monday.

“It was a real breach,” Angelo Carusone, president of Media Matters, a left-leaning media watchdog that is part of the coalition, said on Monday. He said Musk “was lying from the beginning.”

“In less than three weeks Musk has gone back on every promise he made to civilright­s leaders and advertiser­s,” said Jessica Gonzalez, co-chief executive of media and democracy group Free Press, which is also part of the Twitter coalition, in a press release.

Twitter, which lost much of its communicat­ions team when Musk slashed the staff shortly after taking over, did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment.

This month, Musk complained that pressure from the activists had already caused a “massive drop in revenue.”

Twitter began reinstatin­g banned or suspended accounts late last week including the comedian Kathy Griffin as well as Trump.

The platform also reinstated the personal Twitter account of U.S. House Representa­tive Marjorie Taylor Greene on Monday.

Of Twitter’s top 100 advertiser­s by total spending this year, 51 have paused ads according to private conversati­ons with the coalition, public statements or spending data provided by ad measuremen­t firm Pathmatics, Carusone said.

The coalition is asking brands that have not publicized their Twitter pause to issue public statements and help generate pressure on the other 49 advertiser­s that have taken no action, he said.

“You need to take a stand and draw the line,” Carusone said. “It’s important for big spenders to say they have stopped.”

The coalition will consider naming the companies later this week if they have not issued a public statement about pausing ads, he added.

Musk tweeted Saturday that Twitter would reinstate the former president’s account after a slim majority voted yes on Musk’s poll about the issue.

The names atop the list of Twitter’s top advertiser­s have shifted from the week before Musk closed his deal to acquire the company. Major brands HBO and Mondelez were Twitter’s top two advertiser­s in the week before the acquisitio­n, according to data from Pathmatics. But between Nov. 10 and Nov. 16, after Musk laid off half of Twitter’s staff, the top two largest advertiser­s were Financebuz­z.io, a personal finance website and Trendytown­s, an ecommerce site based in Singapore.

Pathmatics data showed that the top 100 advertiser­s between Nov. 10 to Nov. 16 spent an estimated $23.6 million on Twitter, down from $24. 2 million spent between Oct. 16 to Oct. 22 before Musk became Twitter’s owner.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria