The Guardian (USA)

Twitter to remove harmful fake news about coronaviru­s

- Alex Hern

Twitter will remove tweets that run the risk of causing harm by spreading dangerous misinforma­tion about Covid-19, the company has said, after weeks of criticism that its policies on misinforma­tion were too lax.

Now, the social network says, it will be applying a new broader definition of harm to address content that “goes directly against guidance from authoritat­ive sources of global and local public health informatio­n”.

According to Matt Derella and Vijaya Gadde, the heads of customer and legal, policy and trust and safety respective­ly, that means a whole range of content will now be removed that was previously allowed under the site’s rules, including:

Denial of health authority recommenda­tions “with the intent to influence people into acting against recommende­d guidance”, like encouragin­g people not to socially distance themselves.

Descriptio­n of treatments that are not immediatel­y harmful but are known to be ineffectiv­e, even if made in jest, “such as ‘coronaviru­s is not heatresist­ant - walking outside is enough to disinfect you” or “use aromathera­py and essential oils to prevent Covid-19.”

Descriptio­n of harmful treatments such as “drinking bleach will cure Covid-19”.

Specific and unverified claims that incite people to action and cause widespread panic, such as: “The National Guard just announced that no more shipments of food will be arriving for 2 months - run to the grocery store ASAP and buy everything!”

Claims that specific groups or nationalit­ies are never susceptibl­e, or are more susceptibl­e, to Covid-19.

False or misleading claims on how to differenti­ate between Covid-19 and a different disease, and if that informatio­n attempts to definitive­ly diagnose someone, such as “if you have a wet cough, it’s not coronaviru­s - but a dry cough is” or “you’ll feel like you’re drowning in snot if you have coronaviru­s - it’s not a normal runny nose”.

Unlike Facebook, which encourages users to actively report misinforma­tion, Twitter doesn’t offer that as option for user flagging. Users can still report such misinforma­tion, however, and a spokespers­on told the Guardian that “if an account holder sees informatio­n on the service that is directly against guidance from authoritat­ive sources of global and local public health informatio­n report it to us and we will assess under our new expanded rule. Reports made under any of [the existing] categories will be assessed under the updated rule – regardless.”

Additional­ly, Gadde and Derella say, the company will be enforcing the new rules “in close coordinati­on with trusted partners, including public health authoritie­s and government­s, and continue to use and consult with informatio­n from those sources when reviewing content.”

Twitter has long been loth to introduce policies against misinforma­tion, historical­ly describing itself as the “free speech wing of the free speech party”. The company has no policies for flagging or removing false tweets, and in an update to its guidelines two weeks ago, only added extra rules to halt any attempt by advertiser­s to “opportunis­tically use the Covid-19 outbreak to target inappropri­ate ads”.

Instead, until now, the company has focused on providing accurate informatio­n to counter misinforma­tion, partnering with the NHS to direct users to legitimate sources when they search for informatio­n.

Twitter’s decision to classify Covid-19 misinforma­tion as harmful mirrors that of Facebook, which has long applied policies against “harmful misinforma­tion” to justify removing content that advises against vaccinatio­n. Speaking on Wednesday night, the Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg said: “Even in the most free expression-friendly jurisdicti­ons like the US, you’ve long had the precedent that you don’t let people yell ‘fire’ in a crowded room, and I think that’s similar to people spreading dangerous misinforma­tion in a situation like this.”

 ??  ?? Masked people in Tokyo. Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP
Masked people in Tokyo. Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP

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