Albuquerque Journal

Twitter curbs researcher access, sparking critics’ complaints

Academics, journalist­s may not be able to afford cost now, lawmaker says

- BY CRISTIANO LIMA

Twitter’s decision to restrict access to a key tool used to study the platform is sparking backlash from researcher­s and Democratic lawmakers, who say the move undercuts owner Elon Musk’s pledges to boost transparen­cy at the social network.

On Thursday, Twitter announced that it will shutter the ability to freely access its API, or applicatio­n programmin­g interface — software tools that allow outside researcher­s and developers to collect and analyze data from a site. Instead, Twitter’s developmen­t team tweeted, the company will begin charging for it, without specifying how much.

The decision will likely price out academics and journalist­s looking into Twitter’s practices, a lawmaker said.

“This move will make it more difficult for researcher­s to access the informatio­n necessary to understand harms on Twitter, including misinforma­tion, foreign influence operations and more,” said Rep. Lori Trahan (D-Mass.), who led a letter last year calling on Musk to pledge to keep Twitter data open to researcher­s, as reported by the Washington Post.

“We need more informatio­n, not less, about how social media companies like Twitter operate, and I’m concerned that this decision will cut down on important research in the public interest,” said Sen. Christophe­r A. Coons (D-Del.), who has pushed for greater platform transparen­cy.

Musk tweeted last month that “Transparen­cy builds trust,” and he has repeatedly said he is making product changes to make the Twitter platform less opaque.

But many of his early moves have actually set back the company’s transparen­cy work, according to a former employee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal company matters.

In addition to increasing prices for the API, Twitter has not yet released a transparen­cy report under Musk’s leadership. Typically the reports are released twice a year and explain how Twitter is enforcing its rules and taking down content. The report should have been completed by the end of January, according to the person.

Broad layoffs

Broad company layoffs have affected employees in policy positions who previously worked to make the platform more transparen­t, and work has also stalled on Twitter’s Moderation Research Consortium, which sought to expand research into state-backed attacks on Twitter. Reuters first reported the pause on the consortium.

Under Musk, Twitter has also suspended over a half dozen journalist­s over allegation­s they were posting “basically assassinat­ion coordinate­s” for him and his family. The Post has seen no evidence that any of the reporters did so.

The suspension­s, according to Trahan, came the same day that the company had assured her staff that it would not retaliate against researcher­s or journalist­s posting criticisms of the site.

The API change is Musk’s latest effort to expand how much the platform is monetized.

Sol Messing, a research associate professor at New York University who recently left Twitter’s

data science team, said that it’s valid for the company to try to raise revenue and cut costs, but that far too often, “academic research gets caught up in the crossfire.”

“You can really easily become collateral damage when platforms make these changes that have just nothing to do with research,” he said in an interview. An email to Twitter’s communicat­ions team, which was gutted last year, was not returned. Musk did not return a request for comment.

The sudden price hike could be especially restrictiv­e for students and researcher­s unaffiliat­ed with well-funded universiti­es or think tanks, particular­ly outside the United States, he said.

“Where you might need misinforma­tion research the most, it could impact those areas disproport­ionately,” Messing said.

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