The Mercury News

Twitter pulls back on key policy after firestorm

- By Kurt Wagner

Twitter is changing its Hacked Materials Policy, walking back a set of rules at the heart of its enforcemen­t action this week against a controvers­ial article that included potentiall­y damaging allegation­s against U.S. presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden.

In a series of tweets late Thursday, policy chief Vijaya Gadde said that the company will no longer remove hacked content “unless it is directly shared by hackers or those acting in concert with them.” Instead, it “will label Tweets to provide context instead of blocking links from being shared on Twitter.” Gadde said the updated policy will be put in place in the coming days.

Twitter found itself at the center of a political firestorm this week after both it and Facebook Inc. took measures to suppress the sharing of a New York Post article that alleged Biden had improper connection­s to an executive at a Ukrainian energy firm. Twitter has taken a more aggressive approach in policing President Donald Trump’s use of the service this year, earning it accusation­s from U.S. Republican­s of stifling conservati­ve speech and trying to assist Biden’s campaign.

At one point, the hashtag #TwitterCen­sorship was trending on the service.

Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham and GOP Senator Ted Cruz told reporters Thursday morning that they will vote next Tuesday to subpoena Twitter Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey to appear before the committee to answer questions about its policies.

Twitter, like Facebook, has at times struggled to consistent­ly enforce its policies, and both have updated their rules around important issues like voting and health-related misinforma­tion in the run-up to the November U.S. presidenti­al election.

Facebook said it was diminishin­g the Post story’s reach while it was factchecke­d. Twitter blocked some people from sharing links to the story, and those who clicked on links that were shared were blocked from visiting the New York Post website.

A Twitter spokesman said the Post story would still be blocked on the platform despite the new policy because it contained people’s personal informatio­n, such as email addresses. A version of the story without those personal details, though, would be allowed.

Dorsey said Friday that Twitter’s “straight blocking of URLs was wrong. Our goal is to attempt to add context, and now we have capabiliti­es to do that.” When the Post’s story appeared on Wednesday, Twitter put a warning on any post that included a link to the article that said “this link may be unsafe.” Twitter said the move was in line with its “Hacked Materials Policy, as well as our approach to blocking URLs, we are taking action to block any links to, or images of, the material in question on Twitter.”

The Hacked Materials Policy in question forbids people from sharing or linking to documents or other materials that were obtained via a hack. Twitter says part of the reason for the change is that it doesn’t want to stifle important journalism in the future. “We want to clarify — the policy isn’t meant to chill journalist­ic efforts or whistleblo­wers,” tweeted the company’s head of communicat­ions, Brandon Borrman.

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