Twitter has broadened its campaign against hate speech and abuse
TWITTER BROADENS ITS CAMPAIGN AGAINST HATE AND ABUSE
BY BARBARA ORTUTAY AP TECHNOLOGY WRITER Feb 7, 9:47 AM
EST
NEW YORK (AP) -- Twitter has broadened its campaign
against hate speech and abuse.
The company said Tuesday that it has begun identifying
people who have been banned for abusive behavior and it will stop them from creating
new accounts. In July, the company banned conservative provocateur Milo
Yiannopoulos, an editor of the right-wing site Breitbart News, for
"participating in or inciting targeted abuse of individuals."
But the company had been under fire for failing, for
nearly a decade since its founding, to address hate and abuse on the site.
Balancing its reputation as a free speech haven has at times come into conflict
with efforts to protect users.
Twitter also said Tuesday that it is creating a
"safe search" feature that removes tweets with potentially sensitive
content and tweets from blocked and muted accounts from search results. The
tweets will still exist on Twitter if people look for them, but won't appear in
general search results.
Twitter is also singling out and collapsing potentially
abusive and "low-quality" replies so only the most relevant
conversations surface. These replies will also be accessible to those who seek
them out, but Twitter is making them less visible.
The company says the changes will be implemented in the
coming weeks.
© 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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