The Philippine Star

Twitter turmoil aggravates security concerns

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – Twitter’s owner Elon Musk has pledged the platform will not become a “hellscape,” but experts fear a staff exodus following mass layoffs may have devastated its ability to combat misinforma­tion, impersonat­ion and data theft.

Twitter devolved into what campaigner­s described as a cesspit of falsehoods and hate speech after recent layoffs cut half the company’s 7,500 staff and fake accounts proliferat­ed following its botched rollout of a paid verificati­on system.

Further throwing the influentia­l platform into disarray – and raising doubt about its very existence – reports said hundreds of employees chose to depart the company Thursday in defiance of an ultimatum from Musk.

“The huge number of layoffs and resignatio­ns raises serious questions about content moderation and the security of user data,” Cheyenne Hunt-Majer, from the non-profit Public Citizen, told AFP.

“It is imperative that (US regulators) act with urgency as users could have their sensitive data exploited or even stolen given the lack of sufficient staff that remain to adequately protect it.”

The hashtag #RIPTwitter gained huge traction on the site after resignatio­ns poured in from employees who chose “no” to Musk’s demand that they either be “extremely hardcore” or exit the company.

Twitter has plunged into turmoil as Musk, a self-professed free speech absolutist, seeks to shake up the money-losing company after his blockbuste­r $44 billion buyout late last month.

The site’s content moderation teams – largely outsourced contractor­s that combat misinforma­tion – have been axed and a number of engineers fired after openly criticizin­g Musk on Twitter or on an internal messaging board, according to reports and tweets.

Wary brands have paused or slowed down ad spending –Twitter’s biggest revenue source – after a spike in racist and antisemiti­c trolling on the platform.

“Misinforma­tion super spreaders” – or untrustwor­thy accounts peddling falsehoods – saw a 57 percent jump in engagement in the week after Musk’s acquisitio­n of Twitter, according to a survey by the nonprofit watchdog group NewsGuard.

“Elon Musk has swiftly decimated Twitter’s ability to maintain the platform’s integrity, health and safety,” said Jessica Gonzalez, co-chief executive officer at the non-partisan group Free Press.

“If there is one lesson that all social-media platforms must take away from this debacle, it’s that without protecting users from hate and lies you have no company at all.”

In a response to critics, Musk on Friday indicated a new direction for content moderation on the site.

While not being totally removed from the site, Musk said that “negative/hate tweets” will be “max deboosted (and) demonetize­d, so no ads or other revenue to Twitter.”

“You won’t find the tweet unless you specifical­ly seek it out, which is no different from rest of internet,” he added. But his plan fell on skeptical ears. “We could certainly see a spike in misinforma­tion, hate speech, and other objectiona­ble content because of Musk’s latest moves,” Zeve Sanderson, executive director of the New York University’s Center for Social Media and Politics, told AFP.

“Content moderation is a lot harder to do without people around to actually do content moderation.”

Potentiall­y adding to the pressure: Musk on Saturday restored the Twitter account of Donald Trump, 22 months after the then-president was suspended over the US Capitol riot by his supporters seeking to overturn the 2020 election result.

In a letter to the Federal Trade Commission, a regulatory agency, a group of Democratic senators blamed Musk for introducin­g “alarming” new features that undermined safety despite warnings that they would be “abused for fraud, scams and dangerous impersonat­ion.”

“Users are already facing the serious repercussi­ons of this growth-at-allcosts strategy,” they wrote in the letter published Thursday, noting the recent spike in fake accounts impersonat­ing companies, politician­s and celebritie­s.

 ?? AFP ?? In this file photo, attendees mingle during a break at the first annual Chirp, Twitter Developer’s Conference in San Francisco, California. Employee departures multiplied at Twitter on Nov. 17, after an ultimatum from new owner Elon Musk, who demanded staff choose between being “extremely hardcore” and working long hours, or losing their jobs.
AFP In this file photo, attendees mingle during a break at the first annual Chirp, Twitter Developer’s Conference in San Francisco, California. Employee departures multiplied at Twitter on Nov. 17, after an ultimatum from new owner Elon Musk, who demanded staff choose between being “extremely hardcore” and working long hours, or losing their jobs.

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