Daily Trust Sunday

In Twitter purge, top accounts lose millions of followers

- (The New York Times)

AWatch. IPI, a global network of editors, media executives and leading journalist­s for media freedom, has been compiling annual data on the killings of journalist­s since 1997, as part of its press freedom and safety of journalist programmes.

Twenty-two journalist­s - including 11 in Afghanista­n and two in Palestine - have died in targeted killings this year, frequently in retaliatio­n for their work on exposing corruption or the activities of crime syndicates. An additional 18 killings on IPI’s Death Watch are still under review to confirm links to journalist­ic activity, although circumstan­tial evidence in these cases points to targeted killings.

Four journalist­s were killed while covering conflicts or civil unrest, and another five died while on assignment. Of the 49 journalist­s killed, four were women.

Analysis of the data collected in the first six months shows that in many cases of targeted killings of journalist­s, investigat­ions are slow, and the perpetrato­rs have not been brought to justice.

“The impunity with which journalist­s have been murdered and the slow pace of investigat­ions raise the question whether the

Many celebritie­s, politician­s and so-called social media influencer­s found their Twitter followings knocked down a few digits on Thursday as the company slashed tens of millions of suspicious accounts from users’ followers.

For example, the actor Ashton Kutcher, an active member since the company’s early days who led many other celebritie­s to embrace the platform, lost more than a million of his followers. On Wednesday afternoon, he had 19.1 million. By Thursday evening, that was down to 18 million, a drop of nearly 6 percent.

Oprah Winfrey, who sent her inaugural tweet in 2009, had her following cut by about 1.4 million deaths of journalist­s are probed thoroughly and urgently as they should be to protect press freedom”, IPI Head of Advocacy Ravi R. Prasad said.

On February 22 this year, police found the bodies of Ján Kuciak, a reporter with the news website Aktuality.sk, and his girlfriend at his home in Slovakia. Kuciak had been investigat­ing corruption in government; his reporting exposing links between an Italian crime mafia and some members of the Slovak government was published after his death. The between Wednesday and Thursday evening. Ellen DeGeneres lost two million, leaving her at 76.1 million followers.

The basketball star Shaquille O’Neal also lost about a million, dropping from 15.3 million followers. Rihanna lost more than two million - but she still has 86.8 million people watching her tweets. Katy Perry saw her count drop by three million to 107 million. Kim Kardashian West also lost a couple of million. She was at 58.5 million late Thursday as the purge continued.

Aly Pavela, a Twitter spokeswoma­n, said the work of locking and eliminatin­g suspicious accounts from users’ followers would continue over the coming days.

The company is taking killing led to the resignatio­n of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico. Slovak authoritie­s are still continuing to investigat­e the case.

Similarly, in India, investigat­ions are pending in the murders of four journalist­s in different parts of the country. These journalist­s, according to their media organizati­ons, were engaged in investigat­ing cases of corruption. In the case of Syed Shujaat Bukhari, editor-in-chief of Rising Kashmir, who was killed on June 14 outside his office, suspects have been identified but not yet the action to restore trust in its platform. Many users have inflated their followings with automated or fake accounts, buying the appearance of social influence to bolster their political activism, business endeavors or entertainm­ent careers.

When the work is done, Twitter expects it will have reduced the total follower count on the platform by about 6 percent - a

The deadliest country in 2018 so far is Afghanista­n, where nine journalist­s were killed when a suicide bomber detonated amidst them on April 30 in Kabul while they were covering another suicide bomb attack. Two others were shot dead while on their way to work in other parts of the country.

Elsewhere, at least seven journalist­s have been killed in Mexico since the beginning of this year, making the country the second most dangerous in the world for the press. All those journalist­s appear to have been targeted for their work. Last week, IPI called on Mexico’s president and new president-elect to ensure journalist safety after the latest murder of journalist José Guadalupe Chan Dzib at the end of June.

India and the United States rank third in the list with four journalist­s killed in each country. In India, four journalist­s were reportedly killed in separate cases for investigat­ing corruption, whereas in the U.S., four journalist­s and a staff member of Maryland’s Capital Gazette were shot dead by a gunman on June 29.

Last year, 82 journalist­s lost their lives, marking the first time in years that the number of annual deaths fell below 100. (IPI) substantia­l drop.

President Trump, who has used Twitter as a way to speak directly to both loyal voters and critics, lost about 340,000 followers in the Twitter purge, knocked down to 53 million from 53.4 million on Wednesday. His predecesso­r, President Barack Obama, took a much bigger hit, losing three million followers in about one day. (He started with many more, dropping to 101 million on Thursday from 104 million the day before.)

The social media company itself was not spared. Twitter’s main account lost about 12 percent of its total followers (about 7.7 million) from Wednesday to Thursday. The Twitter chief executive, Jack Dorsey, had lost about 230,000 followers by Thursday evening.

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Oprah Winfrey
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Shaquille O’Neal
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