Orlando Sentinel

Twitter warns Trump about rules

Tweet ‘glorifying violence’ in Minn. merits warning

- By Barbara Ortutay and Matt O’Brien

Twitter escalated tensions with President Donald Trump on Friday, adding a warning to one of his tweets for the first time and saying he violated the platform’s rules by glorifying violence when he suggested protesters in Minneapoli­s could be shot.

Trump has been railing against the company since earlier this week, when it for the first time applied fact checks to two of his tweets. Those were about mail-in ballots.

The flap comes at a fraught moment for Twitter and social media more generally. Debate is heating up about when and how much these companies should police the content on their platforms as coronaviru­s misinforma­tion swirls and the 2020 presidenti­al election looms.

The Trump tweet that was flagged Friday came amid days of violent protests over the death of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man who pleaded for air as a white police officer kneeled on his neck in Minneapoli­s.

“These THUGS are dishonorin­g the memory of George Floyd, and I won’t let that happen,” Trump tweeted about the protesters. “Just spoke to Governor Tim Walz and told him that the Military is with him all the way. Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts. Thank you!”

The comment evoked the civil-rights era by borrowing a phrase used in 1967 by Miami’s police chief to warn of an aggressive police response to unrest in black neighborho­ods.

Twitter did not remove the tweet, saying it had determined it might be in the public interest to have it remain accessible. But the tweet was hidden so that a user looking at Trump’s timeline would have to click on the warning to see the original tweet. Hiding it also effectivel­y demotes the tweet by limiting how users can retweet it and ensuring that Twitter algorithms don’t recommend it.

Twitter said Friday it posted the warning label on Trump’s tweet “based on the historical context of the last line, its connection to violence, and the risk it could inspire similar actions today,” but left it up “given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance.”

A tweet using the same language as Trump’s was later posted on the official White House Twitter account, and Twitter put a warning on that, too. It was also posted on Facebook, which hasn’t taken any visible action on it.

Twitter taking a harder line than Facebook on Trump’s posts likely has something to do with Twitter’s decision last year to stop taking political ads, said Melissa Ryan, CEO of consultanc­y group Card Strategies, which researches online disinforma­tion and right-wing extremism. She said the coronaviru­s pandemic has also led Twitter to inch toward stronger enforcemen­t of its policies at the same time that Trump’s tweets have “amped up in terms of crazy and intensity and disinforma­tion.”

“Twitter and Trump have been playing a game of chicken,” Ryan said. “It feels like they’ve both been moving toward this for a while.”

Trump took to Twitter to complain, calling multiple times for the revocation of Section 230, part of a 1996 law overhaulin­g telecommun­ications. That section generally protects social media platforms from liability for material users post on their platforms. Trump on Thursday signed an executive order challengin­g those protection­s.

The order directs executive branch agencies to ask independen­t rule-making agencies including the Federal Communicat­ions Commission and the Federal Trade Commission to study whether they can place new regulation­s on the companies, though experts express doubts much can be done without an act of Congress.

Twitter first outlined in early 2018 that it wouldn’t block world leaders from the platform or remove their controvers­ial tweets. But it announced nearly a year ago that it could apply warning labels and obscure the tweets of world leaders if they used their accounts to threaten or abuse others. That followed complaints from Trump critics that the president has gotten a free pass from Twitter to post hateful messages and attack his enemies in ways they say could lead to violence.

Twitter further clarified its rules in October, saying it will enforce its policies against any user who makes clear and direct threats of violence against a person, but carving out an exception for government officials’ “foreign policy saberrattl­ing on economic or military issues.”

The earlier tweets that Twitter flagged were not hidden but did come with an option to “get the facts about mail-in ballots,“a link that led to fact checks and news stories by media organizati­ons. Those tweets called mail-in ballots “fraudulent” and predicted that “mail boxes will be robbed,” among other things.

Twitter’s decision to flag Trump’s tweets came as the president continued to use the platform to push a debunked conspiracy theory accusing MSNBC host and former congressma­n Joe Scarboroug­h of killing a staffer in his Florida congressio­nal office in 2001. Medical officials determined the staffer had an undiagnose­d heart condition, passed out and hit her head as she fell.

Scarboroug­h, who was in Washington, not Florida, at the time, has urged the president to stop his baseless attacks. The staffer’s husband also recently demanded that Twitter remove the tweets.

The company issued a statement expressing its regret to the husband but so far has taken no other action.

 ?? TWITTER ?? An image from President Trump’s Twitter account shows a tweet he posted Friday with a warning from Twitter.
TWITTER An image from President Trump’s Twitter account shows a tweet he posted Friday with a warning from Twitter.

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