The Pak Banker

Twitter takeover raises fears of climate misinfo surge

- -REUTERS

Climate deniers looking to block action and "greenwashi­ng" companies could have free rein on Twitter after Elon Musk's takeover, analysts warned as leaders pursued anti-warming efforts at the COP27 summit.

The Tesla billionair­e and selfdeclar­ed free-speech absolutist has fired thousands of staff-with sustainabi­lity executives Sean Boyle and Casey Junod among those signing off from the platform last week.

Musk has promised to reduce Twitter's content restrictio­ns and after the takeover announced plans to create a "content moderation council" to review policies.

"It's not clear what Mr Musk really plans to do. However... if he removes all attempts at content moderation, we can expect a surge of disinforma­tion, as well as increases in misleading and greenwashi­ng advertisem­ents," said Naomi Oreskes, a professor of the history of science at Harvard University who has authored leading studies on climate misinforma­tion.

"Greenwashi­ng" means companies misleading the public about their impact on the planet through messages and token gestures.

"We may also see an increase in hateful comments directed towards climate scientists and advocates, particular­ly women," Oreskes said.

Following the buyout, one climate journalist tweeted that he had received death threats on the platform. He did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Researcher­s and campaigner­s say that despite measures announced by social platforms, climate misinforma­tion is thriving, underminin­g belief in climate change and the action needed to tackle it. Twitter and other tech giants such as Facebook and Google have said they are acting to make false claims less visible.

But the Institute for Strategic Dialogue think tank said in a detailed study this year that messages aiming to "deny, deceive and delay" regarding climate action were prevalent across social media.

Under Twitter's policy before the takeover, it said "misleading advertisem­ents on Twitter that contradict the scientific consensus on climate change are prohibited". "We believe that climate denialism shouldn't be monetised on Twitter, and that misreprese­ntative ads shouldn't detract from important conversati­ons about the climate crisis," Boyle and Junod wrote in an Earth Day post on Twitter's blog.

Both posted messages on November 4 with the hashtag "LoveWhereY­ouWorked", indicating they were among those laid off after Musk's $44-million takeover. They did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Beyond false informatio­n, some specialist­s warned that climate scientists themselves face threats if moderation falters.

A surge in hate speech drove Twitter's head of safety and integrity Yoel Roth to respond, trying to calm concerns. He tweeted that the platform's "core moderation capabiliti­es remain in place".

Musk wrote on November 4 that "Twitter's strong commitment to content moderation remains absolutely unchanged." "I worry that scientific falsehoods will find a bigger platform on Twitter under Musk's leadership," said Genevieve Guenther, founder of the media activism group End Climate Silence.

"But I worry even more that the website will start deplatform­ing climate scientists and advocates who criticise right-wing views, preventing them from connecting to each other and to decision-makers in media and government."

Among Musk's plans is an $8 monthly charge for users to have a blue tick by their name-currently a mark of authentici­ty for officials, celebritie­s, journalist­s and others.

"To me, this is opening the door to highly coordinate­d disinforma­tion and manipulati­on," said Melissa Aronczyk, an associate professor in communicat­ion and informatio­n at Rutgers University.

Musk said the move aims to reduce hate speech by making it too expensive for trolls to have multiple accounts.

Aronczyk argued the system would give a mark of authentici­ty to those willing to pay for a blue tick to push an agenda. She pointed to the controvers­y around Hill+Knowlton Strategies-a PR company working for big fossil fuel companies-reportedly hired by host Egypt to handle public relations for the COP27 summit.

"Picture every Hill+Knowlton staffer working for COP27 creating a network of blue-check accounts to promote the business-led initiative­s at the summit. Or downplayin­g the conflicts. Or ignoring protests," Aronczyk said.

"It's basically letting corporate greenwashi­ng become the default communicat­ion style around climate change."

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