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‘No space for promoting terrorism’ — Twitter suspends over 274,000 accounts

 

 

Twitter says it is no longer a desirable platform for call for violence, and has announced the suspension of  over one million accounts for “promotion of terrorism” since 2015.

According to Yahoo News, Twitter, in its latest transparency report, said it suspended 274,460 accounts between July and December 2017 “for violations related to the promotion of terrorism”.

The figure is down 8.4 percent from the previous reporting period and is the second consecutive decline, a Twitter statement said.

“We continue to see the positive, significant impact of years of hard work making our site an undesirable place for those seeking to promote terrorism, resulting in this type of activity increasingly shifting away from Twitter,” said the statement from the messaging platform’s public policy team.

Twitter has faced pressure from governments around the world to crack down on jihadists and others calling for violent attacks, while at the same time maintaining an open platform for free speech.

In the latest six-month reporting period, Twitter said 93 percent of the suspended accounts were “flagged by internal, proprietary tools”, and that 74 percent were cut off before their first tweet.




     

     

    It said government reports of violations related to the promotion of terrorism represent less than 0.2 percent of all suspensions in the period.

    Twitter also used the report to express concerns about what it called “legal threats to freedom of expression” online in countries around the world.

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    “With the passage of new legislation and ongoing regulatory discussions taking place around the world about the future of public discourse online, we are seeing a potential chilling effect with regards to freedom of expression,” the report said.

    It cited a Human Rights Watch report suggesting that “governments around the world (are) increasingly look to restrict online speech by forcing social media companies to act as their censors”.

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