🐱 Twitter Says It’s Cracking Down On Abusive Accounts, But It’s Not Doing Enough

CatParty
https://www.bleedingcool.com/2017/09/17/twitter-cracking-abusive-accounts-really/

Twitter is continually turning a blind eye to this growing concern in the comics community. Numerous accounts repeatedly set out to launch hate campaigns against creators, critics and even fellow fans, but we’re not seeing Twitter do much about it at all.



Some users’ accounts seem entirely set up to continue to harass numerous creators for their perceived failings. Some of these users are taking a concerted stand firmly against increasing diversity in the comics medium, both within the content and the industry. Some of these users show massive distaste for any female characters being presented as anything other than bathing suit-wearing cheesecake T&A fodder, even pushing back against the diversity of female body presentation.

Particularly disturbing, however, is these users’ continued and targeted harassment of trans creators in the medium, and Twitter’s refusal to stop it. It doesn’t matter how many times they are reported; Twitter continues to allow the continued harassment of a group of people, and it’s genuinely starting to look like they just don’t care.

However, part of the problem stands in that the harassers are wise to Twitter’s rules of conduct, in particular, this rule:

Hateful conduct: You may not promote violence against or directly attack or threaten other people on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, religious affiliation, age, disability, or disease.

As long as they do not explicitly makes threats to the lives of their victims, or suggest violence upon them, then these users can sneak past Twitter’s rules on hateful conduct. They can perform endless psychological and emotional harassment against their targets, as long as they manage their wording to avoid those specific actions — and they know that.

Unfortunately, we have seen this before. GamerGate saw the same tactics used, both in circumventing Twitter’s rules around conduct, and in targeting and harassing people of colour, women, trans women, and other members of the LGBTQ community. And many of the users talked about above are actively modelling their own movement within the comics industry on the heinous actions of this similar group that attacked the gaming industry.

And while Twitter may be an American-originated company, it is now a global concern, and the rules of freedom of speech and such are not the same throughout the globe. Additionally, while these people might have the right to express their opinion, Twitter is a company — a business. It doesn’t have to protect people who use that freedom of speech to enact psychological and emotional hate on communities.

At this stage, Twitter really needs to take a look at their rules of conduct and consider that threats of death and violence are one thing, but targeted harassment, psychological and emotional abuse, and actual use of hate speech can be equally as harmful. It needs to take a firmer stance on those who would use that to harm vulnerable members of the community.

Back in 2016, Twitter started the Twitter Trust and Safety Council, wherein it partnered with numerous groups working to make Twitter a safer place for users to be. However, it is arguable that 2016 saw a sudden increase in the amount of hugely visible abusive tweets and harassment on the platform.

Then in February 2017, Twitter said this:

Stopping the creation of new abusive accounts:
We’re taking steps to identify people who have been permanently suspended and stop them from creating new accounts. This focuses more effectively on some of the most prevalent and damaging forms of behavior, particularly accounts that are created only to abuse and harass others.

And in July, Twitter reported that “people are experiencing significantly less abuse on Twitter today than they were six months ago.” The statement went on to say:

We’re now taking action on 10x the number of abusive accounts every day compared to the same time last year. We also now limit account functionality or place suspensions on thousands more abusive accounts each day.

And yet, numerous creators, critics and fans of comics who are female, LGBTQ+ or POC are finding themselves the continued targets of deeply threatening Twitter users who seem to get off without consequence.

Twitter says it’s cracking down, but it appears the time and resources truly needed to take care of this situation are not being invested. The more they look the other way when it comes to these accounts, the more they are actively endangering the mental and emotional health and well-being — and even the livelihoods — of many of these creators, critics, and fans. Twitter must try harder.

If I haven’t convinced you, check out this man’s experience:

 
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Reactions: FierceBrosnan

That's a lot of words for REEEEEEEE.

Seriously, if they actually did enforce this, they'd ban tons of loony troons who do nothing but harass people who do "problematic" fan art and shit like that, meaning on-model normal fan art that doesn't genderbend characters into morbidly obese black trannies with vitiligo and W.C. Fields noses.

I say give them what they ask for. Ban everyone.

Or just shut down Twitter entirely. It was a mistake.
 
Think the comics book thing is a reference to "Diversity and Comics" - primarily active on Twitter and Youtube - and his ongoing fued with Marvel and their #MilkshakeCrew of writers.
 
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If I had serious fuck you money I would buy Twitter just to make it impossible to block people and then laugh as the streets became clogged with the corpses of troons and Neo Marxists who an hereoed because they heard an opposing viewpoint.
 
If I had serious fuck you money I would buy Twitter just to make it impossible to block people and then laugh as the streets became clogged with the corpses of troons and Neo Marxists who an hereoed because they heard an opposing viewpoint.

They say those who control Twitter control one of the pillars of the Trooncast.

And those who control all the pillars, control the universe.
 
Oh please.

What about all the sexual content on twitter? Replace all the tweets in this video with explicit sexual content, and it makes the exact same argument: this content is distasteful and embarrasses twitter's brand name.

Hell, to really rub their noses in the inconsistency, choose tweets involving gay men talking about dildo purchases.
 
Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, etc, have become large enough websites that they ought to be held to the 1st Amendment. In an age where discourse is shifting from public, tangible spaces to private digital platforms, holding this standard that "the gubment oght not tell compinies wut 2 do" is going to do a lot of damage in the long run.

But at least, given the nature of the Internet and the greater accessibility to anonymity, it is becoming harder for companies to censor people, try as they might. Silver linings I guess.
 
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Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, etc, have become large enough websites that they ought to be held to the 1st Amendment. In an age where discourse is shifting from public, tangible spaces to private digital platforms, holding this standard that "the gubment oght not tell compinies wut 2 do" is going to do a lot of damage in the long run.

But at least, given the nature of the Internet and the greater accessibility to anonymity, it is becoming harder for companies to censor people, try as they might. Silver linings I guess.

I think to the extent companies like this want to be treated as some kind of equivalent to a common carrier like the phone company or other public utilities, they should be held to that, but there's still a place for curated spaces. For instance, if someone wants to set up a kid-friendly site with games or whatever, where there are codes of conduct, they should be allowed to do that. They just shouldn't necessarily get the complete immunity from liability that should probably be given to the larger, more utility-like companies.

The bitching about Twitter is completely unwarranted, though. You can block fucking anything. You can block the person you don't like, you can block anyone even mentioning them, you can use any number of bots that autoblock shit on any criteria you can imagine. These people are just shitting their pants in rage that people are even allowed to have opinions they don't like. If they're actually making threats, call the cops. If they're actually harassing you but it doesn't add up to lawsuit material, fucking sue them.

If you have a case worth shit, a lawyer will take it on contingency where they only collect if they win. If you can't find someone to do that, odds are really good your case is shit, you're just a whining crybaby pussy, and you should kill yourself.
 
The video's got nothing to do with diversity in comics, it's about some German guy who objects to Twitter not banning (mostly) other Germans who quite possibly are un-ironic Nazis. The writer's just pulling a version of Godwin's Law on people who hate the current publishing policy of Marvel.

And of course Twitter can't moderate itself properly. It's got millions of users and doesn't make any money, and it's brand-name is already in the toilet with the people who matter (investors) for not making money. Frankly, it's not going to be made any worse by the users abusing each other.
 
Twitter has a real double standard problem. It’s next to impossible to get someone banned for saying “kill the honkeys #yesallwhitepeople” but simply suggest that the crime rate in the black community is statistically significantly higher than other races and suddenly you’re the bad guy.

But really, I’ve seen perfectly harmless tweets end up in permanent suspensions and nothing on actual I want to murder this entire group of people based on their race tweets.
 
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Twitter has a real double standard problem. It’s next to impossible to get someone banned for saying “kill the honkeys #yesallwhitepeople” but simply suggest that the crime rate in the black community is statistically significantly higher than other races and suddenly you’re the bad guy.

But really, I’ve seen perfectly harmless tweets end up in permanent suspensions and nothing on actual I want to murder this entire group of people based on their race tweets.
It's always a fun shitstorm if someone says that because it always leads to the "It's different because we're powerless" nonsense as if that's true, everyone is some weird racial hivemind, and those are completely healthy thoughts.
 
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