The Morning Call

Twitter chaos may risk public safety

Officials face new challenge: Proving they are authentic

- By Stephen Groves

As Twitter became knotted with parody accounts and turmoil, Rachel Terlep, who runs an account for the Washington State Department of Natural Resources that interspers­es cheeky banter with wildfire and weather warnings, watched with trepidatio­n and fascinatio­n.

“It kind of feels like a supernova moment right now — a big, bright flash before it all goes away,” she said.

So the department took advantage of the moment with humor. “Update: The Twitter wildfire is 44 billion acres and 0% contained,” they posted.

It also linked to a thread that gave helpful tips about how to review a handle to see if it’s real. Some suggestion­s included looking at how old the account is and checking to see if the public safety agency’s website links to the profile.

It underscore­d the challenge for the people tasked with getting public safety informatio­n out to communitie­s. Now, they don’t only have to get informatio­n out quickly. On the new Twitter, they also have to convince people they are actually the authoritie­s.

Government agencies, especially those that send messages during emergencie­s, have embraced Twitter for its efficiency and scope. Getting accurate informatio­n from authoritie­s during disasters is often a matter of life or death. For example, the first reports last week of a deadly shooting at the University of Virginia came from the college’s Twitter accounts that urged students to shelter in place.

Disasters also provide fertile ground for false

informatio­n to spread online. Researcher­s like Jun Zhuang, a professor at the University of Buffalo who studies how false informatio­n spreads during natural disasters, say emergencie­s create a “perfect storm” for rumors, but that government accounts have also played a crucial role in batting them down.

During Hurricane Harvey in 2017, for example, an online rumor spread that officials were checking immigratio­n status at storm shelters. However, crisis communicat­ion researcher­s have also found that the city’s mayor reassured residents and helped the community pull together with a constant stream of Twitter messages.

Amid the slew of changes at one of the world’s most influentia­l social media platforms, the public informatio­n officers who operate government Twitter accounts are cautiously waiting out the turmoil

and urging the public to verify that it really is their accounts appearing on timelines. While it’s long been an issue, it’s especially worrisome now as a proliferat­ion of brand impersonat­ions spreads across the platform and changes to verificati­on take hold.

Darren Noak, who helps run an account for Austin-Travis County emergency medical services in Texas, said Twitter’s blue checkmark has often been discussed among those who operate government Twitter accounts. The badge — up until earlier this month — indicated an account was verified as a government entity, corporatio­n, celebrity or journalist.

The Associated Press reviewed dozens of government agencies responsibl­e for responding to emergencie­s from the county to the national level, and none had received an official label — denoted by a gray checkmark

— by Friday. Spoof accounts are a concern, Noak said, because they create “a real pain and a headache, especially in times of crisis and emergency.”

Government accounts have long been a target of copycats. Fairfax County in Virginia had to quash fake school closures tweeted from a fraudulent account during a 2014 winter storm.

It has become even harder in recent days to verify that an account is authentic.

In the span of a week, Twitter granted gray checkmark badges to official government accounts — then rescinded them. It next allowed users to receive a blue checkmark through its $8 subscripti­on services — then halted that offering after it spawned an infestatio­n of imposter accounts. And recently, Twitter laid off outsourced moderators who enforced rules against harmful content.

Twitter hasn’t responded

to media requests for informatio­n since Musk took over, but its support account has posted: “To combat impersonat­ion, we’ve added an ‘Official’ label to some accounts.”

Twitter’s changes could be deadly, warned Juliette Kayyem, a former homeland security adviser at the state and national levels who now teaches at Harvard’s Kennedy School.

Twitter has become a go-to source of localized informatio­n in emergencie­s, she said. But imposter accounts could introduce a new level of misinforma­tion — or disinforma­tion when people intentiona­lly try to cause harm — in urgent situations. When instructin­g the public how to respond, the right instructio­ns, such as sheltering in place or evacuating a certain area, can be a matter of life or death.

“In a disaster where time is limited, the greatest way to limit harm is to provide accurate and timely informatio­n to communitie­s about what they should do,” Kayyem said. “Allowing others to claim expertise — it will cost lives.”

In the past, Kayyem had worked with Twitter to research how government agencies can communicat­e in emergencie­s. She said the leadership at Twitter’s trust and safety department “thought long and hard” about its public service role, but Twitter has lost those high-level leaders.

Some agencies are pushing audiences to other venues for informatio­n.

Local government websites are often the best place to turn for accurate, up-to-date informatio­n in emergencie­s, said April Davis, who works as a public affairs officer and digital media strategist at the Oregon Department of Emergency Management. She said her agency doesn’t yet plan to change how it engages on Twitter, but also emphasized that it’s not the best place to turn to in emergencie­s.

“If it goes away, then we’ll migrate to another platform,” said Derrec Becker, chief of public informatio­n at the South Carolina Emergency Management Division. “It is not the emergency alert system.”

Twitter accounts for emergency management in Washington, South Carolina and Oregon provide public service informatio­n on preparing for disasters and weather alerts.

Becker, who has cultivated the agency’s sizable Twitter following with a playful presence, said emergency alerts broadcast on TV, radio or cellphones are still the go-to methods for urgent warnings.

Shortly after Becker fielded questions from The Associated Press on his agency’s plans, the department tweeted: “Leave Twitter? Disasters are kind of our thing.”

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/GETTY-AFP ?? A smartphone shows Elon Musk with Twitter’s logo in the background. With Musk leading the social media platform, public safety personnel now need to convince people that they are legitimate authoritie­s.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/GETTY-AFP A smartphone shows Elon Musk with Twitter’s logo in the background. With Musk leading the social media platform, public safety personnel now need to convince people that they are legitimate authoritie­s.

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