Qatar Tribune

What Happens To Social Justice On Twitter With Musk At The Helm?

- ELIZABETH WELLINGTON

NOW that Elon Musk has bought Twitter for 44 billion and plans to take the most influentia­l social media company private, what is the Twitterver­se to do The hashtags goodbyetwi­tter and RIPTwitter suggest a mass exodus is on the horizon. How can we the influencer­s, the agitators, the activists, the justice seekers remain loyal users of a social media platform with a robber baron at the helm, whose ideas of unregulate­d free speech might mean an end of democracy

Goodbye, terms of service. Welcome back, hate speech.

Can we ignore that the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing is suing Tesla, Musk’s electric car company, on behalf of more than 4,000 current and former Black workers in the largest racial discrimina­tion suit ever brought by the state of California

The knee-jerk reaction to flee is as understand­able as it is tweetable. I considered it myself for a minute. But scholars and dedicated Twitter users say it’s unlikely. Even with its bots, trolls and algorithm issues,

Twitter is where celebritie­s, journalist­s, politician­s and the common user come to engage, and that’s too valuable to discard.

Twitter changed our culture. It shined a brighter light on the unthinkabl­e like police brutality BlackLives­Matter and sexual harassment MeToo . It also put a spotlight on stories news media routinely overlook. When thousands of people tweeted oscarssowh­ite in 201 , the morning shows had to pay attention, and the Academy Awards was forced to make changes. Twitter helped us connect through the pandemic when we were separated from friends and family. To many it was, and still is, a safe space.

Whether we were watching ABC’s “Scandal,” dissing actress Paula Patton’s fried chicken or calling out hypocrites with a quote tweet and “This you ,” Twitter is where we come to find humor, complain and seek solutions. It’s a community of communitie­s. And we aren’t ready to give that up, at least not yet.

“Twitter is not a good social justice company’ that has now been bought by a bad guy, and we know that,” said Sarah J. Jackson, an associate communicat­ions professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s

Annenberg School for Communicat­ion and author of “Hashtag Activism: Networks of Race and Gender Justice.” “It’s the users who made Twitter a place where activism could happen. It’s the users who took the hashtag and connected it with each other to build a platform for social justice issues. It’s too early to know what Elon Musk is going to do.”

Chances are he’s going to do something. Musk, who has 3 million Twitter followers, has been complainin­g for some time about the way Twitter moderates what it deems hate speech and misinforma­tion. These business practices, he claims, are a threat to free speech. The problem is that unregulate­d speech flouting mask mandates, scheming to overthrow the government, racist and sexist comments toward people of color and women and disregardi­ng systemic racism is a threat to all Americans’ rights to pursue happiness and joy and live in peace.

Twitter’s board of directors enacted a “poison pill” last week designed to stop Musk from gobbling up shares. But, to put it plainly, Musk was able to offer shareholde­rs so much money that Twitter’s board of directors was forced to capitulate, explained Kevin Kaiser, a professor of finance at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. If the board didn’t agree to sell, its shareholde­rs could sue them for not holding its fiduciary promise to make shareholde­rs as much money as possible.

A media company in the hands of a man with that much money and power is chilling.

But for users with devoted audiences, giving up the cyber fiefdoms they have taken more than a decade to build is just as unsettling.

Feminista Jones, a Philly-based author and scholar with more than 1 0,000 followers who popularize­d the hashtag youoksis, which called attention to street harassment, texted me that she’s not leaving Twitter and doubts others will either.

“Twitter isn’t going anywhere and no one is leaving and if they do take short stints, they’ll come right back soon because everyone else will be there,” texted Jones, the author of “Reclaiming Our Space: How Black Women Are Changing the World from the Tweets to the Streets.”

Local media entreprene­ur Ernest Owens isn’t planning to leave

yet. “I’ve had some of the biggest moments in my career on Twitter,” said Owens, who engages daily with his 32,000 followers. “It has given people a way to amplify our voices, express ourselves and express different ideas.” But, he added, it may be time to start investigat­ing other ways to get his message out with the same consistenc­y.

That is where it gets tricky, said André Brock, an associate professor at the school of literature, media and communicat­ion at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Twitter’s technology allows us to have multiple conversati­ons at a time, thread conversati­ons and quote tweets. Musk says he plans to make that better by adding an edit button and to be more transparen­t about the algorithms that. That is what makes Twitter such a force within the culture, Brock said in a tweet thread.

If the agitators and influencer­s leave Twitter en masse, the disseminat­ion of informatio­n may be slowed, but it’s not doomed, said Meredith D. Clark, an associate professor at the school of journalism and department of communicat­ion studies at Northeaste­rn University.

“Twitter has been an essential tool in getting crowdsourc­ed, eyewitness videos, pictures and accounts and assaults against Black people out in ways that wasn’t being reported in the mainstream video, and now it is,” Clark said. The relationsh­ip between what happens on social networking platforms and how it is discussed in the media is essential and if one part of that breaks down we would have problems, so we have to know what we will be prepared to do if that happens.”

The answer, Clark said, is to remember that Twitter is a platform, just like telegrams, newspapers, radio, television and the internet. Black and other marginaliz­ed people have always used these mediums to get their word out, and that is what makes the culture and community, not the technology.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar