𝕏 / Twitter / X, the Social Media Platform Formerly Known as Twitter / "MUSK OWNS TWITTER"

To the surprise of no one really, yes, twitter staff is apparently infested to the roof with actual bonafide glowniggers who made important choices about everything on the platform..

All the Social Media sites have similar levels of Glowniggers
 
Discord will eventually have its moment where something happens that cannot be brushed off with a simple "oh that is just a small insignificant server we didn't notice because there was no reports" and there will be a big abandonment towards Matrix and the same will occur, perpetual instance hopping, whats worse -- the rooms float in the air so if Owner/Admin/Moderator rights are distributed across multiple instances the channels will float forever, until every single instance is parted from the room each new connection will synchronize the room and pass it on to any other instances that connect.
discord will be even worse because that's shilled hard by a lot of companies. think using reddit instead of forums or customer support portal x 10.
there already was that discord admin/cup-porn thing, but that seem to have flown below everyone's radar.

True, but remember Roth was also taking Mike Huckabee jokes literally and using others' "interpretations" of Trump's tweets as the logic behind permanent suspensions, rather than the literal words Trump typed, so I kinda think he deserves to have everything he says taken in the worst possible light, at least for a bit. It's what he subjected all of Twitter to.

It's maddening that they leave tweets like this up when they'd use the same tweets against their enemies without hesitation.
don't forget shit like "I hate whites", tweeted by a microsoft exec. imagine that in the opposite color.
 
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Former Head of Twitter Trust and Safety Under Scrutiny For Past Tweets, PhD Thesis
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Twitter’s former Global Head of Trust and Safety is under scrutiny for past comments in which he appeared to question the age at which youth can consent to sexual activity. Following the public resignation of Yoel Roth, who had worked for the social media giant for seven years, netizens began circulating his PhD thesis – which argues that minors under the age of 18 should be able to access applications for adults.

On December 10, Twitter CEO Elon Musk caused waves after sharing a screenshot from Roth’s PhD thesis which appeared to imply that minors should be permitted to use Grindr, an application used by adult gay men to facilitate sexual encounters.

“It’s worth considering how, if at all, the current generation of popular sites of gay networked sociability might fit into an overall queer social landscape that increasingly includes individuals under the age of 18,” reads Roth’s thesis, which was titled “Gay Data” and submitted in 2016 at the University of Pennsylvania.

Musk’s tweet was in response to human trafficking survivor and vocal anti-trafficking advocate Eliza Bleu. Bleu has been drawing attention to instances of child sex trafficking that have occurred on or been facilitated through the Twitter platform.

Bleu highlighted a 2010 tweet from Roth which posed the question, “Can high school students ever meaningfully consent to sex with their teachers?” Roth included a link to a Salon article titled, “Student-teacher sex: When is it OK?”

The article details the case of a former high school teacher in Washington state who had sexual relations with a student in the days leading up to her graduation. Matthew Hirschfelder, then 33, was charged with first degree sexual misconduct with a minor, though the female student was 18 at the time.

The court’s ruling in Hirschfelder’s case reads, “That the legislature saw fit to criminalize sex between school employees and high school students — even those who reach the age of majority while registered as students — is a policy choice that recognizes the special position of trust and authority teachers hold over their students.”

The Salon piece boosted by Roth on his Twitter contests this statement and appears to advocate for sexual encounters between teenagers and adults: “The ruling essentially recasts all registered students between the age of 16 and 21 as incapable of consenting to sex.” The article concludes by agreeing with the sole dissenting judge in the court case, who asserted that the majority opinion cautioning against teacher-student sex “does not, ultimately, make sense.”

Roth operated a personal blog until very recently, when the same URL began to host a very bland profile of himself displaying nothing more than his Twitter feed and his upcoming speaking engagements. In his earliest posts, he complains about dating apps, STDs, and being labelled a “slut” by friends.

“Being sexually active for a number of years, this was by no means my first HIV test, but it was the first that triggered anything other than a temporary sense of relief; I felt, somehow, vindicated, as if karmically, all my previous choices had been validated by writ of not having ‘won’ the STI roulette,” Roth wrote in a 2010 post titled “Slut.”

In addition to his own blog, Roth wrote on other platforms.

In 2016, shortly after the release of his PhD thesis on Grindr, Roth penned a Medium post in which he admitted to maliciously investigating and releasing personal details on the identity of an anonymous man he had seen on Grindr, doxing him for no discernible reason.

“… For no reason except boredom and prurience and a mild, irrational dislike for athletes left over from high school, I made it my mission to discover the mystery basketball player’s true identity,” Roth wrote, explaining that he went on to publicly post “steps” that would lead any user to discover this person’s identity.

“Fortunately, I had the decency not to post his name; but I posted enough that anyone sufficiently interested could follow my steps. Mission accomplished.”

He added that his PhD thesis was inspired by this experience, and that having exposed the man’s personal information was not necessarily “wrong” or something he should actually have felt bad about.

“I went on to write an entire dissertation about privacy, safety, and identity on Grindr, to try to deal with my guilt for an afternoon of college stupidity, targeted at someone I’d never even met, for doing something that wasn’t shameful or wrong or really remarkable at all.”

Roth has a long history of sexually-charged tweets, and appeared to frequently bring pornographic paraphernalia and visuals into professional and public spaces.

In 2014, Roth tweeted out a link to a 34th Street submission titled “Sharing Semen.” While the post was submitted under an anonymous byline, Roth’s accompanying Tweet suggested he may have been responsible for the post.

The controversy surrounding Roth comes just as concerns regarding Twitter’s historical moderation process have once again been thrust into the spotlight.

Advocates have raised alarms for years on both the facilitation of sex trafficking and the widespread distribution of child sexual exploitation materials which have taken place on the platform. Twitter’s response has routinely been labelled inadequate, if not outright dismissive.

Earlier this year, Twitter scrapped plans to launch a subscription-based adult content service inspired by OnlyFans after a team of 84 employees suggested it would allow exploitative materials to further flourish on the platform.

“Twitter cannot accurately detect child sexual exploitation and non-consensual nudity at scale,” concluded the Twitter team, which found that the company lacked the ability to verify users’ ages.

Since Elon Musk took over the company, internal information regarding political censorship carried out by top-ranking Twitter personnel has been intentionally revealed to the public. Musk handed over documents to a select group of journalists, who have collaborated on a project known as “The Twitter Files.”

In the second installment, journalist Bari Weiss authored a break-down of censorship methods used by leading staff members, including Roth, such as the utilization of blacklists designed to limit the visibility of user viewpoints that employees disliked.

One such notable account, @libsoftiktok, frequently shares videos of trans activists taken from TikTok accounts. The account’s owner, Chaya Raichik, is critical of drag queen events for children and opposes the teaching of gender identity ideology in schools.

Despite Twitter personnel internally admitting that Raichik had “not directly engaged in behavior violative of the Hateful Conduct policy,” her account has been suspended six times in 2022 alone on the basis of “hateful conduct.”

Beyond the accounts directly named in the recent revelations from The Twitter Files, many users have taken the information as an admission of widely shared speculation on the biased and ineffective ways Twitter has moderated content.

Users who oppose gender ideology on the platform have asserted they are disproportionately targeted by the moderation system, which they say favors mainstream political viewpoints.

Sam Barber has maintained a running list of over 400 “gender critical” women who have been suspended or penalized by Twitter, most of whom posted relatively benign comments. Barber often juxtaposes those Tweets against far more violent and abusive messages posted by pro-gender ideology users which Twitter often refuses to take action on.

In November, a convicted child murderer began making accounts on Twitter to harass Reduxx writers and supporters. Synthia China Blast, who was recently discharged from parole after serving 25 years in prison, utilized photos of Reduxx contributor Jennifer Gingrich and Editor-in-Chief Anna Slatz, and posted threatening and sexual comments about them. Blast had targeted Reduxx following an October 24 report on his parole status.

Users who reported Blast’s accounts in an effort to have him removed from the platform often reported that Twitter found “no violations” in his content. In contrast, Gingrich received a temporary ban from the platform after responding to Blast and condemning his harassment campaign.

But the inconsistency in moderation was perhaps most dramatically exposed last year, after a survivor of child sexual abuse filed a lawsuit against Twitter alleging that the platform refused to take down widely shared pornographic images and videos of his abuse because it did not violate the company’s policies.

Former DoD intelligence specialist is head of Twitter's elections response team, deletes LinkedIn after Twitter Files revelations

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Matt Taibbi unleashed an epic third installment of the Twitter Files on Friday night, exposing the decisions and actions behind banning President Donald Trump on the platform. In a series of tweets, Taibbi showed that Twitter's Elections & Crisis Response Patrick Conlon was pushing for the removal of jokes and content by conservatives on the platform. Prior to his term at Twitter, Conlon worked in intelligence for the US Department of Defense.

Conlon acitvely worked to silence these accounts by saying the jokes were a violation of the terms of service.

On January 6, 2021, the day of the Capitol riot and Trump's last rally as president, held at the Ellipse, Trump tweeted out to supporters to tell them to disperse from the Capitol.

"These are the things and events that hapepn when a sacred landslide election victor is so unceremoniously & viciously stripped away from great patriots who have been badly & unfairly treated for so long. Go home wiht love & peace," Trump wrote. "Remember this day forever!"

In internal conversations, Conlon said "What the actual f*ck? Can this go to Staff too? I'm labelling this now."

"Yes," Yoel Roth, head of Twitter Trust and Safety said.

"Sorry," Conlon wrote. "I actually got emotionally angry seeing that. Turns out I'm not a full robot. Who knew?"

They flagged for moderation a tweet in which the sitting president told rioters to disperse from the Capitol.

In the lead up to the 2020 presidential election, a Twitter exec shared a joke from Governor Mike Huckabee with collegues, saying "putting this tweet on everyone's radar. This appears to be a joke but other people might believe it. Can I get your weigh in this?"

It read: "Stood in rain for hour to early vote today. When I got home I filled in my stack of mail-in ballots and then voted the ballots of my deceased parents and grandparents. They vote just like me!"

It was a joke.

Yet, Roth, who notably believes that satire can cause real world violence and should therefore be suppressed, replied, saying "Ugh. Yeah, I saw this one last night. Agree it's a joke... but he's also literally admitting in a tweet to a crime."

It was a joke.

"Could still mislead people," another exec chimed in. "But although misleading, in my opinion, I don't think it can unduly influence the election. Could still mislead people."

"Yeah. I could see us taking action under 'misleading claims that cause confusion about the established laws, regulations, procedures, and methods of a civic process,'" Roth replied, "but it's not one that we could really label in a useful way, so it's [sic] removal (of a stupid and ill-advised joke) or nothing. I'm maybe inclined not to remove without a report from voting authorities given it's been a while since he tweeted it and virtually all of the replies I'm seeing are critical/counterspeech."

Conlon weighed in, saying "Ooof. I just saw this. Looking at the replies now to get a feel for it much confusion is being generated. A quick glance indicates that people aren't confused, but I have concerns. Under the policy we don't make exceptions for jokes or satire. So while I doubt that Huck was really this stpid and is joking, I'm inclined to say that it should come down."

Conlon and Roth felt they were smart enough to discern a joke from a factual statement, but that the American people were not.

Shortly after these revelations, Conlon deleted his LinkedIn account.
 
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Hadn't paid attention to this thread in a month and caught up by highlights for the most part. Jesus fuck what a wild ride. Hope some of this actually reaches the normiesphere.
How Social Media Are Run By The Government And Why You Should Care

As Nykysnottrans posted, what they are doing is illegal in the US:
theusgovernmentcannotoutsourcecensorshiptoaprivatecompany-jpg.4039368
 
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