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Twitter Has Suspended 235,000 Accounts Since February For Promoting Terrorism (theverge.com) 132

An anonymous reader writes: Twitter has suspended 235,000 accounts since February for promoting terrorism, the company said in a blog post today. "Daily suspensions are up over 80 percent since last year, with spikes in suspensions immediately following terrorist attacks," the company wrote. "Our response time for suspending reported accounts, the amount of time these accounts are on Twitter, and the number of followers they accumulate have all decreased dramatically." The company said it's also expanded the team that works on flagging such content, and claims to have made progress on stopping accounts from starting again under a new handle. In a previous post from February, Twitter said it had suspended 125,000 accounts since mid-2015.
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Twitter Has Suspended 235,000 Accounts Since February For Promoting Terrorism

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  • Contra-Number? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday August 18, 2016 @01:09PM (#52727067)

    And how many people has it silenced who are against terrorism [theguardian.com]?

    I'd be more impressed if they didn't seem to have a little club that used a small cabal to decide who should be banned and who not... real trolls roam free on Twitter while people deviating from Group-Think are banned. It makes me question if the numbers they give are even real or just for show.

    • And as we all know, the worst "real troll" of them all is the no-true-Scotsman

  • Nannybot 2016 (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 18, 2016 @01:12PM (#52727101)

    I'm against the promotion of terrorism and all that, but do we really want tech companies policing our speech?

    This would like someone listening to all our telephone conversations to see if we were talking about terrorism. Oh, wait...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      If I run a service, I want to be able to decide who uses it, yes.

      • by OhPlz ( 168413 )

        Phone companies can't do that. Your ISP probably can't. Where do you draw the line?

        • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

          Wrong. TOCs for these services have clauses stating myriad reasons why they may drop you, and they are typically phrased in such a way as to be effectively arbitrary. The only reason ISPs don't invoke these clauses as often as Twitter is that it takes law enforcement involvement to tie an online action to an ISP customer in the first place. Harassment is chief among the reasons your phone company might drop you, and the only reason this is less common is that troll types generally don't have the balls to ma
        • You draw the line if it's a vital service with no competing alternative. Like electricity, home phone lines, sewer, water, garbage, and probably internet service ... to name a few.

          Outside of that a company can refuse service to whoever they want. Twitter falls so far outside the realm of "vital service" that it's not even a question. Twitter's only concern is setting rules that maximize their use base (and hence profit). In this case obviously they've decided that it's in their interests to quell terrorism-

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Hope you aren't breaking into baking, because I've got some bad news about your dreams of your control over your business...

      • What an outdated concept. You don't have the right anymore to refuse service to people.

    • I'm against the promotion of terrorism and all that, but do we really want tech companies policing our speech?

      This would like someone listening to all our telephone conversations to see if we were talking about terrorism. Oh, wait...

      I guess we do, if by "we" you mean the majority of the people that use these public forums. And that's the nub of it, I suspect: the word 'public'. I don't use social media very much, but as far as I know, none of them guarantee that you are private, when you use them, on the contrary. They let you use their sites for free, because their business model needs the data you provide when you use their services; that is the way you pay them. They only want to keep it "private" in the sense that this is valuable

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Great, after they're done we can stop them from continuing.

    As good as this xkcd: http://xkcd.com/937/

  • Freedom of speech (Score:5, Insightful)

    by danbob999 ( 2490674 ) on Thursday August 18, 2016 @01:19PM (#52727157)

    So twitter is against freedom of speech?

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      The terrorists should declare themselves corporations, THEN they'll get freedom-of-speech.

    • That's the gist of this.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Kierthos ( 225954 )

      The First Amendment guarantees that the government will not abridge your freedom of speech. (Certain limitations, among them threatening public officials, still apply.)

      It says nothing about private entities, such as corporations, being prohibited from abridging your speech.

      Look at it like this. Freedom of speech does not guarantee you a venue. It guarantees you a voice. No one has to listen, and no one is obligated to provide you a microphone.

      You can say what you want, but Twitter still has the option under

      • Unless that microphone sits atop a cake for a same sex wedding wedding. You tolerant people sow our own destruction with your intolerance.

        • You should read Karl Popper. Tolerating intolerant views (such as homophobia) is, in fact, a logical fallacy and NOT tolerating them does NOT in any way make you intollerant, you CAN'T be tolerant UNLESS you are refuse to tolerate those views - since tolerating them will lead to the destruction of ALL tolerance.

      • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )

        The First Amendment guarantees that the government will not abridge your freedom of speech. (Certain limitations, among them threatening public officials, still apply.)

        It says nothing about private entities, such as corporations, being prohibited from abridging your speech.

        Look at it like this. Freedom of speech does not guarantee you a venue. It guarantees you a voice. No one has to listen, and no one is obligated to provide you a microphone.

        You can say what you want, but Twitter still has the option under their Terms of Service to ban you. You can still say the same things; you just can't say them on their service.

        I would add it also does not protect you from the consequences of speech. Yell fire in a theater is the mos quoted example, but walking into a biker bar and telling the biggest guy there his girl looks like a methhead skank and her crotch smells like the rotting cum from the last gangbang is well within your rights. No piece of paer is going to protect you from what happens next.

        • To add to your example. Lets assume the guy then starts beating you, you pull out a gun and shoot him. You claim self defense in court - you will be convicted of murder. Self-defence in almost all jurisdictions on earth is precluded as a defence for 'first aggressor' and no sane judge or jury would NOT consider your words there to make you the 'first aggressor' - after all, they are clear an example of "fighting words".

  • It's a good thing that there are absolutely zero terrorism-promoters who might have some level of familiarity with basic automated spamming techniques.

    Otherwise this would seem pretty futile.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    But Trump's account is still active... Along with Clinton's. There got both sides of the crooked fence for you guys. Sorry, but neither are Presidential material. But Clinton is a professional and Trump is a child.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Do you want a professional corrupt lying scumbag, or an amateur corrupt lying scumbag? That's one for the philosophers.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        I don't want to waste my vote on either of them, which is why I donated to Gov. Gary Johnson's campaign.

        • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

          Donating to Johnson's campaign might make sense - assuming you want his message heard, and that your donation will help that. Actually voting for him is a vote for Trump if you would otherwise have voted for Clinton - and vice versa. There's no point claiming that your 'personal integrity' prevents voting for one of the two viable choices. Abstaining (which a Johnson vote essentially would be) isn't a particularly virtuous stance - no matter how much you flatter yourself that it is.

          • Unless you truly don't like either of the two mainstream candidates and wouldn't vote for either one if they paid you. Then it's not a misplaced move in an overarching game, it's just a vote for the candidate you do want to win.
            • Why is paying for a vote illegal anyway ? It makes no sense. You can buy candidates. You can spend a fortune trying to sway elections.
              Why should only politicians get to be bribed to support something ? Why not let them buy voters too ?

              It would be the greatest piece of entirely voluntary wealth distribution in history. That may just make up for the insanity of who will rule.

              On the other hand, if you think that's crazy, welcome to the anti-money-in-politics side of the fence.

      • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

        It's more like - do you want a professional, equivocating, truth-shading, politician, or an amateur, flat-out liar who says completely insane shit all the time along with its complete opposite from minute to minute.

        This Hillary and Trump are 'both liars' argument is a big part of the reason Hillary lies - and used a private email server in the first place. She's a 'liar' to the extent that you can play gotcha with things she says - and many do and have. And she tried to hide her email to prevent it from b

      • If "Will they lie" was the only concern - the amateur would win.

        But since the question here is "which person should have the fucking nuclear launch codes" - I will choose to go with the person who isn't a fucking textbook example of antisocial personality disorder ("psychopath" in common parlance).

        Now in a sane world - this would be the time to vote third party - unfortunately no third party candidates in the US deserve a vote either. No really. Neither Gary Johnson nor Jill Stein deserves a vote no matter

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ...that Trump's account was deleted?

  • What about all the horrorists out there? Who will stop their scourge of horror? I'm personally most worried about the 'discomfortists', day by day they erode the fabric of everyday human comforts and conveniences... Damn them... Damn them to hechell...
  • First they came.. (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    First they came for the terrorist supporters, and I did not speak up because I was not a terrorist supporter.

    • Because clearly, promoting violence as a means of getting your way politically is totally equivalent to that quote.

      • Sometimes there is a peace that can only be found on the other side of war. And if that war must come then *I* will fight it!
        • If these people wanted a war, that would be great, instead, they advocate for violence against civilian targets. If you really want to support that, feel free, but I and many like me will just call you a coward, not a warrior.

          • "these people" are over 250,000 people twitter has silenced under the general heading "advocating terrorism" it is impossible to claim what they are advocating or to stand for or against it as we don't really know.

            What constitutes a civilian is also ambiguous when you are talking about an internal struggle against your own government. Suddenly police go from civilian to uniformed and armed agents of government and a civilian resistence can not obey the usual rules of war, with dramatically inferior resource
            • Basically, our own criteria for selecting enemy combatants applied against our own domestic government by an armed civilian force engaged in civil war is in fact fair game. Bombing a bus just for the shock value is not.

              That is the point I am trying to make. The definition of terrorism doesn't cover what you are speaking of, it is about attacking helpless bystanders. Things like car/backpack bombs, attacking a mall in Africa, those types of things. People advocating for a new government shouldn't be considered terrorists, as they aren't engaged in terror attacks.

              The patriots in the American revolution weren't terrorists, the IRA were. The difference is entirely in the methods used to achieve the goals.

  • BullShit (Score:5, Insightful)

    by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Thursday August 18, 2016 @01:46PM (#52727413)

    They have suspended conservative posters simply because of posts of those people's followers, but they let ISIS supporters like Anjem Choudary continue to post.

    And while they might pretend to take some actions against terrorism. they seem to be doing nothing to silence posts promoting tourism.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Banning speech just moves it from one platform to another

    I'd rather honestly know who the assholes are, instead of banning them and having them go underground.

    The best counter of hate speech is more speech.

    The best disinfectant for a society is the light of day.

  • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Thursday August 18, 2016 @02:28PM (#52727749)
    I don't tweet, but I wonder what percentage of their user base that is. Maybe it's small, but I wonder what that does to the attitude of investors, and/or those looking to sell ads. This number seems really high.

    In other news, in the condition that the world is in these days, all that's going on, simply talking about what's happening, and sharing your thoughts makes it hard for others to NOT be able to look at what's been said as terror.

    • As of the end of the second quarter of 2016, they had 313 million active monthly users.

      Now, how many of those are twitter-bots, I couldn't tell you.

  • I think a lot worse is done by our war promoting hate promoting mainstream media...

  • After all, hinting that gun owners might take matters into their own hands IF Hillary is elected (the time ordering and meaning of his sentences was very clear) sounds like promoting anarchy, treason, and terrorism to me.

    Also, if he asserts that Obama is the "founder of ISIS" then he has to acknowledge that he wanted to "found ISIS" in exactly the same way as he clearly an unequivocally stated in TWO CNN interviews. So let's call him -- by his own standards -- a "co-founder of ISIS".

    One can then work one's

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I would really like to see something like this, of the banned accounts by geolocation.

  • This is deeply disturbing.

    A private company is divining which of its users are in some way expressing opinions that it thinks might be divergent with that of the government of the country in which t operates?

    This is far beyond an act of fascism. Twitter did this of its own accord, not at the request of government. Twitter per-emptively bowed in obeisance due to its fear of a government demand,

    If you do not find this disturbing, then you have not read enough history.

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