Twitter suspends 300,000 accounts tied to terrorism |
TWITTER Inc., under pressure from governments around the
world to combat online extremism, said that improving automation tools
are helping block accounts that promote terrorism and violence.
In
the first half of the year, Twitter said it suspended nearly 300,000
accounts globally linked to terrorism. Of those, roughly 95 per cent
were identified by the company’s spam-fighting automation tools.
Meanwhile,
the social network said government data requests continued to increase,
and that it provided authorities with data on roughly 3,900 accounts
from January to June.
The increasing role of machines in
fighting extremism is a function of necessity, with manually identifying
violent material within the millions of messages sent every day an
impossible task.
Twitter currently has around 328 million users, with monthly active users in the US around 68 million.
Twitter,
along with Facebook and YouTube, are instead building automation tools
that quickly spot troublesome content. Facebook has roughly 7,500 people
who screen for troublesome videos and posts. It’s also funded groups
that produce anti-extremism content that’s circulated on the social
network.
Twitter said about 75 per cent of the blocked
accounts this year were spotted before a single tweet was sent, and that
935,897 accounts had been suspended since August 2015, with two-thirds
of those coming in the past year.
“Our anti-spam tools
are getting faster, more efficient and smarter in how we take down
accounts that violate our policy,” Twitter said in a statement.
The
company is balancing a commitment to free speech against pressure from
policymakers who want to see social media companies do more to fight
extremism and hate speech.
While the company is suing
the US government in an effort to report more granular information about
the national-security requests it receives, Twitter last year signed a
voluntary pledge in Europe to take action within 24 hours against
reports of racist, xenophobic and violent content.
American
authorities made 2,111 requests from Twitter from January to June, the
most of the 83 countries tracked by the company. Twitter supplied
information on users in 77 per cent of the inquiries. Japan made 1,384
requests and the UK issued 606 requests.
Turkish
authorities continued a trend of aggressively policing Twitter, making
554 requests for account data and issuing court orders to remove 715
pieces of content. Other governments made only 38 total content-removal
requests.
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