The Guardian (USA)

Twitter and Google join Facebook in tightening rules on US election claims

- Alex Hern

Premature claims of victory will be blocked from Twitter and Google in the run-up to November’s US presidenti­al election, as both companies follow Facebook in trying to fight the prospect of a stolen vote.

Under its new rules, Twitter will treat as harmful misinforma­tion any tweet which makes false claims about election rigging, or prematurel­y claims to announce the election results.

The platform does not currently have rules against such tweets because its misinforma­tion policy is designed to combat only those messages with the potential to cause “immediate harm”, but starting on 17 September, Twitter says, certain claims about elections move into that category.

“Twitter is where people come to hear directly from elected officials and candidates for office, it’s where they come to find breaking news, and increasing­ly, it’s an integral source for informatio­n on when and how to vote in elections,” the company said in a blogpost.

The new rules do not commit Twitter to removing such misinforma­tion; instead, it may choose to apply a label to the offending tweets, as it has done with previous examples of electoral misinforma­tion shared by Donald Trump.

Google’s policies focus on the company’s search autocomple­te, which offers suggestion­s for terms to search for based on what users have entered.

The company says it will remove any prediction­s that look like they could be claims “for or against a particular candidate or party”.

It will also remove prediction­s that seem to offer any informatio­n about voting methods, requiremen­ts or polling locations: for instance, the company said, neither “you can vote by phone” nor “you can’t vote by phone” will appear as search suggestion­s.

The rules will not, Google emphasised, affect search results themselves.

Last week, Facebook led the way with a similar set of rules, announced by its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg. “This election is not going to be business as usual,” he wrote in a post on the site. “If any candidate or campaign tries to declare victory before the results are in, we’ll add a label to their post educating that official results are not yet in and directing people to the official results,” Facebook said.

None of the companies explicitly named Donald Trump in their explanatio­n for the new policies, but fears have been growing for some time that the president could seize on delayed results, due in part to the rapid increase in voting by mail, and declare himself victor before the true count is known.

 ?? Photograph: Denis Charlet/AFP via Getty Images ?? Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, wrote last week that November’s election was ‘not going to be business as usual’.
Photograph: Denis Charlet/AFP via Getty Images Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, wrote last week that November’s election was ‘not going to be business as usual’.

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