Culture I Was Attacked by Trump and Musk. It Was a Strategy to Change What You See Online.

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I Was Attacked by Trump and Musk. It Was a Strategy to Change What You See Online.


By Yoel Roth

Dr. Roth is the former head of trust and safety at Twitter.

When I worked at Twitter, I led the team that placed a fact-checking label on one of Donald Trump’s tweets for the first time. Following the violence of Jan. 6, I helped make the call to ban his account from Twitter altogether. Nothing prepared me for what would happen next.

Backed by fans on social media, Mr. Trump publicly attacked me. Two years later, following his acquisition of Twitter and after I resigned my role as the company’s head of trust and safety, Elon Musk added fuel to the fire. I’ve lived with armed guards outside my home and have had to upend my family, go into hiding for months and repeatedly move.

This isn’t a story I relish revisiting. But I’ve learned that what happened to me wasn’t an accident. It wasn’t just personal vindictiveness or “cancel culture.” It was a strategy — one that affects not just targeted individuals like me, but all of us, as it is rapidly changing what we see online.

Private individuals — from academic researchers to employees of tech companies — are increasingly the targets of lawsuits, congressional hearings and vicious online attacks. These efforts, staged largely by the right, are having their desired effect: Universities are cutting back on efforts to quantify abusive and misleading information spreading online. Social media companies are shying away from making the kind of difficult decisions my team did when we intervened against Mr. Trump’s lies about the 2020 election. Platforms had finally begun taking these risks seriously only after the 2016 election. Now, faced with the prospect of disproportionate attacks on their employees, companies seem increasingly reluctant to make controversial decisions, letting misinformation and abuse fester in order to avoid provoking public retaliation.

These attacks on internet safety and security come at a moment when the stakes for democracy could not be higher. More than 40 major elections are scheduled to take place in 2024, including in the United States, the European Union, India, Ghana and Mexico. These democracies will most likely face the same risks of government-backed disinformation campaigns and online incitement of violence that have plagued social media for years. We should be worried about what happens next.

My story starts with that fact check. In the spring of 2020, after years of internal debate, my team decided that Twitter should apply a label to a tweet of then-President Trump’s that asserted that voting by mail is fraud-prone, and that the coming election would be “rigged.” “Get the facts about mail-in ballots,” the label read.

On May 27, the morning after the label went up, the White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway publicly identified me as the head of Twitter’s site integrity team. The next day, The New York Post put several of my tweets making fun of Mr. Trump and other Republicans on its cover. I had posted them years earlier, when I was a student and had a tiny social media following of mostly my friends and family. Now, they were front-page news. Later that day, Mr. Trump tweeted that I was a “hater.”

Legions of Twitter users, most of whom days prior had no idea who I was or what my job entailed, began a campaign of online harassment that lasted months, calling for me to be fired, jailed or killed. The volume of Twitter notifications crashed my phone. Friends I hadn’t heard from in years expressed their concern. On Instagram, old vacation photos and pictures of my dog were flooded with threatening comments and insults. (A few commenters, wildly misreading the moment, used the opportunity to try to flirt with me.)

I was embarrassed and scared. Up to that moment, no one outside of a few fairly niche circles had any idea who I was. Academics studying social media call this “context collapse”: things we post on social media with one audience in mind might end up circulating to a very different audience, with unexpected and destructive results. In practice, it feels like your entire world has collapsed.

The timing of the campaign targeting me and my alleged bias suggested the attacks were part of a well-planned strategy. Academic studies have repeatedly pushed back on claims that Silicon Valley platforms are biased against conservatives. But the success of a strategy aimed at forcing social media companies to reconsider their choices may not require demonstrating actual wrongdoing. As the former Republican Party chair Rich Bond once described, maybe you just need to “work the refs”: repeatedly pressure companies into thinking twice before taking actions that could provoke a negative reaction. What happened to me was part of a calculated effort to make Twitter reluctant to moderate Mr. Trump in the future and to dissuade other companies from taking similar steps.

It worked. As violence unfolded at the Capitol on Jan. 6, Jack Dorsey, then the C.E.O. of Twitter, overruled Trust and Safety’s recommendation that Mr. Trump’s account should be banned because of several tweets, including one that attacked Vice President Mike Pence. He was given a 12-hour timeout instead (before being banned on Jan. 8). Within the boundaries of the rules, staff members were encouraged to find solutions to help the company avoid the type of blowback that results in angry press cycles, hearings and employee harassment. The practical result was that Twitter gave offenders greater latitude: Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene was permitted to violate Twitter’s rules at least five times before one of her accounts was banned in 2022. Other prominent right-leaning figures, such as the culture war account Libs of TikTok, enjoyed similar deference.

Similar tactics are being deployed around the world to influence platforms’ trust and safety efforts. In India, the police visited two of our offices in 2021 when we fact-checked posts from a politician from the ruling party, and the police showed up at an employee’s home after the government asked us to block accounts involved in a series of protests. The harassment again paid off: Twitter executives decided any potentially sensitive actions in India would require top-level approval, a unique level of escalation of otherwise routine decisions.

And when we wanted to disclose a propaganda campaign operated by a branch of the Indian military, our legal team warned us that our India-based employees could be charged with sedition — and face the death penalty if convicted. So Twitter only disclosed the campaign over a year later, without fingering the Indian government as the perpetrator.

In 2021, ahead of Russian legislative elections, officials of a state security service went to the home of a top Google executive in Moscow to demand the removal of an app that was used to protest Vladimir Putin. Officers threatened her with imprisonment if the company failed to comply within 24 hours. Both Apple and Google removed the app from their respective stores, restoring it after elections had concluded.

In each of these cases, the targeted staffers lacked the ability to do what was being asked of them by the government officials in charge, as the underlying decisions were made thousands of miles away in California. But because local employees had the misfortune of residing within the jurisdiction of the authorities, they were nevertheless the targets of coercive campaigns, pitting companies’ sense of duty to their employees against whatever values, principles or policies might cause them to resist local demands. Inspired, India and a number of other countries started passing “hostage-taking” laws to ensure social-media companies employ locally based staff.

In the United States, we’ve seen these forms of coercion carried out not by judges and police officers, but by grass-roots organizations, mobs on social media, cable news talking heads and — in Twitter’s case — by the company’s new owner.

One of the most recent forces in this campaign is the “Twitter Files,” a large assortment of company documents — many of them sent or received by me during my nearly eight years at Twitter — turned over at Mr. Musk’s direction to a handful of selected writers. The files were hyped by Mr. Musk as a groundbreaking form of transparency, purportedly exposing for the first time the way Twitter’s coastal liberal bias stifles conservative content.

What they delivered was something else entirely. As tech journalist Mike Masnick put it, after all the fanfare surrounding the initial release of the Twitter Files, in the end “there was absolutely nothing of interest” in the documents, and what little there was had significant factual errors. Even Mr. Musk eventually lost patience with the effort. But, in the process, the effort marked a disturbing new escalation in the harassment of employees of tech firms.

Unlike the documents that would normally emanate from large companies, the earliest releases of the Twitter Files failed to redact the names of even rank-and-file employees. One Twitter employee based in the Philippines was doxxed and severely harassed. Others have become the subjects of conspiracies. Decisions made by teams of dozens in accordance with Twitter’s written policies were presented as having been made by the capricious whims of individuals, each pictured and called out by name. I was, by far, the most frequent target.

The first installment of the Twitter Files came a month after I left the company, and just days after I published a guest essay in The Times and spoke about my experience working for Mr. Musk. I couldn’t help but feel that the company’s actions were, on some level, retaliatory. The next week, Mr. Musk went further by taking a paragraph of my Ph.D. dissertation out of context to baselessly claim that I condoned pedophilia — a conspiracy trope commonly used by far-right extremists and QAnon adherents to smear L.G.B.T.Q. people.

The response was even more extreme than I experienced after Mr. Trump’s tweet about me. “You need to swing from an old oak tree for the treason you have committed. Live in fear every day,” said one of thousands of threatening tweets and emails. That post, and hundreds of others like it, were violations of the very policies I’d worked to develop and enforce. Under new management, Twitter turned a blind eye, and the posts remain on the site today.

On Dec. 6, four days after the first Twitter Files release, I was asked to appear at a congressional hearing focused on the files and Twitter’s alleged censorship. In that hearing, members of Congress held up oversize posters of my years-old tweets and asked me under oath whether I still held those opinions. (To the extent the carelessly tweeted jokes could be taken as my actual opinions, I don’t.) Ms. Greene said on Fox News that I had “some very disturbing views about minors and child porn” and that I “allowed child porn to proliferate on Twitter,” warping Mr. Musk’s lies even further (and also extending their reach). Inundated with threats, and with no real options to push back or protect ourselves, my husband and I had to sell our home and move.

Academia has become the latest target of these campaigns to undermine online safety efforts. Researchers working to understand and address the spread of online misinformation have increasingly become subjects of partisan attacks; the universities they’re affiliated with have become embroiled in lawsuits, burdensome public record requests and congressional proceedings. Facing seven-figure legal bills, even some of the largest and best-funded university labs have said they may have to abandon ship. Others targeted have elected to change their research focus based on the volume of harassment.

Bit by bit, hearing by hearing, these campaigns are systematically eroding hard-won improvements in the safety and integrity of online platforms — with the individuals doing this work bearing the most direct costs.

Tech platforms are retreating from their efforts to protect election security and slow the spread of online disinformation. Amid a broader climate of belt-tightening, companies have pulled back especially hard on their trust and safety efforts. As they face mounting pressure from a hostile Congress, these choices are as rational as they are dangerous.

We can look abroad to see how this story might end. Where once companies would at least make an effort to resist outside pressure, they now largely capitulate by default. In early 2023, the Indian government asked Twitter to restrict posts critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In years past, the company had pushed back on such requests; this time, Twitter acquiesced. When a journalist noted that such cooperation only incentivizes further proliferation of draconian measures, Mr. Musk shrugged: “If we have a choice of either our people go to prison or we comply with the laws, we will comply with the laws.”

It’s hard to fault Mr. Musk for his decision not to put Twitter’s employees in India in harm’s way. But we shouldn’t forget where these tactics came from or how they became so widespread. From pushing the Twitter Files to tweeting baseless conspiracies about former employees, Mr. Musk’s actions have normalized and popularized vigilante accountability, and made ordinary employees of his company into even greater targets. His recent targeting of the Anti-Defamation League has shown that he views personal retaliation as an appropriate consequence for any criticism of him or his business interests. And, as a practical matter, with hate speech on the rise and advertiser revenue in retreat, Mr. Musk’s efforts seem to have done little to improve Twitter’s bottom line.

What can be done to turn back this tide?

Making the coercive influences on platform decision making clearer is a critical first step. And regulation that requires companies to be transparent about the choices they make in these cases, and why they make them, could help.

In its absence, companies must push back against attempts to control their work. Some of these decisions are fundamental matters of long-term business strategy, like where to open (or not open) corporate offices. But companies have a duty to their staff, too: Employees shouldn’t be left to figure out how to protect themselves after their lives have already been upended by these campaigns. Offering access to privacy-promoting services can help. Many institutions would do well to learn the lesson that few spheres of public life are immune to influence through intimidation.

If social media companies cannot safely operate in a country without exposing their staff to personal risk and company decisions to undue influence, perhaps they should not operate there at all. Like others, I worry that such pullouts would worsen the options left to people who have the greatest need for free and open online expression. But remaining in a compromised way could forestall necessary reckoning with censorial government policies. Refusing to comply with morally unjustifiable demands, and facing blockages as a result, may in the long run provoke the necessary public outrage that can help drive reform.

The broader challenge here — and perhaps, the inescapable one — is the essential humanness of online trust and safety efforts. It isn’t machine learning models and faceless algorithms behind key content moderation decisions: it’s people. And people can be pressured, intimidated, threatened and extorted. Standing up to injustice, authoritarianism and online harms requires employees who are willing to do that work.

Few people could be expected to take a job doing so if the cost is their life or liberty. We all need to recognize this new reality, and to plan accordingly.

Yoel Roth is a visiting scholar at the University of Pennsylvania and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and the former head of trust and safety at Twitter.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

Source : https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/18/opinion/trump-elon-musk-twitter.html
 
This man is a fascist no-longer commissar

Oh no I violated the fundamental principle of our civil society and people were mad at me for it, they disagreed with and resisted my authoritarianism and the authoritarianism of my fellow travelers, I'm a victim, we're the victims!
 
I’ve lived with armed guards outside my home and have had to upend my family, go into hiding for months and repeatedly move.
Yoel Roth is playing a shell game with imaginary enemies. There are no MAGA hat-wearing death squads stalking this delusional, paranoid momser. You'll notice Roth proffers no evidence of an imminent threat, no actual examples of any instance where his life has been in danger, only his reactions to what he perceives must be a threat because, as we all know, This is MAGA country, boy, and ya'll better watch your step if you know what's good for you.

This is the fucker who banned a sitting Republican president of the United States, along with anyone else right-of-center who might be damaging to The Narrative. This is the skeevy rat bastard who made Twitter a safe place for pedophiles. I suspect he thinks we must be after him given all the vile shit he's done. We're not, although I like it that Roth stays awake nights and looks over his shoulder thinking we are. Serves him right.
 
After FBI collusion with Twitter, I have no doubt in my mind that this person knows what he is doing is wrong. History never stopped. The FBI was proven evil long before social media. Many of their ilk for better or worse, live as long as the rest of us. Maybe if humans in general lived until they are say, 500, they will eventually figure out that they are wrong, what they've done is wrong and have to live with it. I do hope at least some of this alleged MAGA harassment is real, because he deserves it.
 
Similar tactics are being deployed around the world to influence platforms’ trust and safety efforts. In India, the police visited two of our offices in 2021 when we fact-checked posts from a politician from the ruling party, and the police showed up at an employee’s home after the government asked us to block accounts involved in a series of protests. The harassment again paid off: Twitter executives decided any potentially sensitive actions in India would require top-level approval, a unique level of escalation of otherwise routine decisions.

And when we wanted to disclose a propaganda campaign operated by a branch of the Indian military, our legal team warned us that our India-based employees could be charged with sedition — and face the death penalty if convicted. So Twitter only disclosed the campaign over a year later, without fingering the Indian government as the perpetrator.

In 2021, ahead of Russian legislative elections, officials of a state security service went to the home of a top Google executive in Moscow to demand the removal of an app that was used to protest Vladimir Putin. Officers threatened her with imprisonment if the company failed to comply within 24 hours. Both Apple and Google removed the app from their respective stores, restoring it after elections had concluded.
Uh...why is a PLATFORM fact checking user generated content? You aren't a news outlet, you're a microblogging service, stay in your fucking lane and none of this happens.

Nice flourish with the 3rd of the examples being something that, back in the day, would have been worth getting pissy about, trying to appeal to the free speech types. Misses the mark though since these "platforms" lost the neutrality and moral highground to even pretend to have a line in the sand years before Moscow came knocking with an unreasonable demand.
Inundated with threats, and with no real options to push back or protect ourselves, my husband and I had to sell our home and move.
Oh course he is.
Where once companies would at least make an effort to resist outside pressure, they now largely capitulate by default.
Again, y'all ceded any ability to ever resist pressure when you decided to not resist certain pressures. It's all or nothing, you utter retard.
From pushing the Twitter Files to tweeting baseless conspiracies about former employees, Mr. Musk’s actions have normalized and popularized vigilante accountability, and made ordinary employees of his company into even greater targets.
No, you fuckers did by creating an impenetrable janitorial wall that started powertripping in the name of the greater good. YOU all created those policies, and then enforced them, willingly. You can't pass the buck forever on this shit.
If social media companies cannot safely operate in a country without exposing their staff to personal risk and company decisions to undue influence, perhaps they should not operate there at all.
No, retard, social media companies shouldn't act like big-fucking-brother and then maybe they can actually claim "don't blame us, we didn't post it"....but what is that? Oh you started fact checking posted content? There's your first fucking mistake. If you can't act like a PLATFORM, you definitely shouldn't be operating at all.
The broader challenge here — and perhaps, the inescapable one — is the essential humanness of online trust and safety efforts. It isn’t machine learning models and faceless algorithms behind key content moderation decisions: it’s people. And people can be pressured, intimidated, threatened and extorted. Standing up to injustice, authoritarianism and online harms requires employees who are willing to do that work.
Yes, and people are also biased as fuck, which is why the policies need to demand content neutrality and removal of illegal content, not "fact checking" and all that other shit. Otherwise you get the Janisatzgruppen which is what actually happened.
Few people could be expected to take a job doing so if the cost is their life or liberty.
Good.

What was it antifa always yelled at the cops as they gleefully burned the shit around them?

"Quit your job!" I think that was what they chanted.

Funny how pottery frequently rhymes. emot-allears.gif
 
At this point its expected that Jews will do anything they can to suppress everyone else, expecting them not to act like subversive shitheads is like expecting a table to become a car. What really annoys me is so many people have been brainwashed into reflexively defending them when they openly brag about it.
 
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Reactions: The Internet Dick
Surely, someone so passionate about user trust and safety at Twitter wouldn't have left the company for a completely retarded reason, right?

"Roth left the company after Musk refused to not give blue checkmarks to Twitter Blue subscribers [4]"

:story:
Seen so many libs pretend the check marks were meaningless that then sperged out once they were given out to everyone.

Really broke their brains to have equality on Twitter.
 
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Reactions: Rei is Shit.
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People weren't theorizing Yoel "condoned" child sexual exploitation material, but rather, that he engaged in it.

Twitter had a massive P3DO material problem while Yoel was the head of Safety. Even their own internal reports (just before Elon took over) showed they never made the tools necessary or made serious attempts to weed out CP. | Archive | Archive

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Although left leaning news outlets and activists claimed the opposite after Elon took over.
Add to that Yoel's now moved PhD dissertation. | Old Archive | New Archive
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Where he downplayed and dismissed the fact that some Gay men victimize teens and children, calling such realities "classic tropes".
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Argued that Grindr shouldn't be out right dismissed as a possible location for queer youth to use to meet up.
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Argued not to hold online spaces like Grindr (and by extension Twitter) culpable, because similar attacks happen elsewhere too.
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And even called groups that utilized these spaces to catch and expose Gay men attempting to engage with underage boys as a "source of danger" because they "lure gay men into meeting" but conveniently left out whom these Gay men were attempting to meet.
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But what if there was another reason to suspect Yoel.
Yoel Roth ran a website, forum, and Ezine in the early 2000's called whatislime.com | Archive | Archive | Archive | Archive
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Here he is getting help with some issues the site had.| Archive
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Around that time, lime, had a special meaning in "certain" communities | Archive | Archive
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He ran the site under the pseudonym Trigxine | Archive | Archive
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DeviantArt | Archive
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LiveJournal where he used to call himself Leon | Archive
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What a feeling | Archive
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The "profile of my very own" in the above SS links to his Myspace | Archive
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His AIM was "children are yum" | Archive
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If you check AOL, children are yum shows up as a deactivated account.
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This is the message you get if the account never existed.
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Both his p3do ICQ and Leon ICQ are still active | Archive | Archive
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And while I cannot verify (and I doubt) if any of the following accounts are Yoels, I think it gives a pretty good idea of the kind of mind that might take on such a moniker.
 
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I find myself routinely at a loss for words, every single day of my life. It’s just one kid toucher after another with these high profile people who influence everything in our system, it makes me sick. The level of actual evil that permeates humanity is beyond the pale, we are basically begging for apocalypse and there would be nobody more deserving. Fucking start over, just burn it all and start over.

Get thee behind me you fucking perverts.
 
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