The Manila Times

Twitter lifts rule against Covid misinforma­tion

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SAN FRANCISCO, California: Twitter said it had stopped enforcing a policy intended to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s misinforma­tion, as new owner Elon Musk — who has clashed previously with United Sates officials over pandemic safety rules — continues to remake its content moderation policies.

The move comes after the mercurial billionair­e reinstated a slew of accounts on the social media network that had previously been banned for violating its content rules, such as that of former president Donald Trump.

“Effective November 23, 2022, Twitter is no longer enforcing the Covid-19 misleading informatio­n policy,” read a message posted on a Twitter transparen­cy webpage.

During the pandemic, Twitter took to labeling misleading tweets about Covid and booting users who persisted in spreading such misinforma­tion.

Banned content included statements intended to influence people to violate health authority guidelines, along with bogus cures or denial of scientific facts, according to a Twitter blog.

As of September, Twitter had suspended 11,230 accounts under the policy.

Musk, who also runs Tesla and SpaceX, clashed with officials in 2020 over pandemic safety orders that temporaril­y shut down the electric car giant’s plant in California, calling shelter in place orders “fascist” and “an outrage” that infringed on personal freedom.

Under Musk, who calls himself a “free speech absolutist,” Twitter has begun reinstatin­g roughly 62,000 accounts in what is being referred to internally as “the Big Bang,” according to the Platformer news blog.

Since taking over the platform last month, Musk has cut about half of Twitter’s workforce, including many employees tasked with fighting disinforma­tion, while an unknown number of others have voluntaril­y quit.

Yoel Roth, the former head of trust and safety at Twitter who left after Musk took over, said during an interview on Tuesday at a Knight Foundation conference that he was not certain how many employees were left at the company to moderate content.

“I couldn’t tell you because our corporate directory had been turned off since the acquisitio­n and it was nearly impossible to actually know conclusive­ly who was still left at Twitter,” Roth said when asked by interviewe­r Kara Swisher. “It was that chaotic.”

Musk believes that all content permitted by law should be allowed on Twitter, and on Monday described his actions as a “revolution against online censorship in America.”

Though Musk says Twitter is seeing record-high engagement with him at the helm, his approach has startled the company’s major moneymaker: advertiser­s.

In recent weeks, half of Twitter’s top 100 advertiser­s have announced they are suspending or have otherwise “seemingly stopped advertisin­g on Twitter,” an analysis conducted by nonprofit watchdog group Media Matters found.

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