Culture Twitter bans 7,000 QAnon accounts, limits 150,000 others as part of broad crackdown

Twitter bans 7,000 QAnon accounts, limits 150,000 others as part of broad crackdown
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-n...qanon-accounts-limits-150-000-others-n1234541 (https://archive.vn/uJZc9)

Twitter announced on Tuesday it has begun taking sweeping actions to limit the reach of QAnon content and banned many of the conspiracy theory's followers due to ongoing problems with harassment and the dissemination of misinformation.

Twitter will stop recommending accounts and content related to QAnon, including in email, push, and follow recommendations and will take steps to limit content circulation in places like trends and search. This action will impact approximately 150,000 accounts, according to a spokesperson, who asked to remain unnamed due to concerns about the targeted harassment of social media employees.

The Twitter spokesperson also said the company had taken down more than 7,000 QAnon accounts in the last couple weeks for breaking its rules on targeted harassment as part of its new policy.

The sweeping enforcement action will ban QAnon-related terms from appearing in trending topics and its search feature, ban known QAnon-related URLs, and ban “swarming” of victims who are baselessly targeted by coordinated harassment campaigns pushed by its followers.

The spokesperson said while the targeted enforcement against QAnon fell under Twitter’s existing platform manipulation rules, its classification of QAnon as coordinated harmful activity was a new designation. The spokesperson said Twitter was taking action now because of an escalating degree of harm associated with the conspiracy theory.

Twitter plans to permanently suspend accounts that violate existing policies around platform manipulation, ban evasion and operate multiple accounts, behaviors commonly seen used by QAnon accounts, the spokesperson said. Twitter began blocking QAnon websites last week and will continue to block the distribution of QAnon-related URLs, the spokesperson said.

QAnon is a baseless right-wing conspiracy theory that centers around the belief that an anonymous tipster is revealing how President Donald Trump is leading a secret war against a so-called Deep State — a collection of political, business and Hollywood elites who worship Satan and abuse and murder children. The conspiracy theory draws its roots from Pizzagate, which claimed Hillary Clinton ran a pedophile ring outside of a Washington D.C. pizza shop.

QAnon emerged from the fringes of the internet's conspiracy community to become a recognized political phenomenon, with Trump supporters showing up at events with "Q" merchandise. Qanon followers have also been implicated in armed standoffs, attempted kidnappings, harassment and murder since the conspriacy first gained traction in in the internet in October 2017.

Last year, the FBI designated QAnon as a potential domestic terror threat. The FBI’s report on QAnon’s ties to dangerous real-world activities led in part to Twitter’s decision, a spokesperson said.

Despite no evidence and numerous predictions that failed to materialize, QAnon support has trickled into the mainstream, with numerous Republican candidates for Congress openly espousing their support for the movement.

And the coronavirus pandemic has only added more momentum to what is now a QAnon movement that has new found common ground with other fringe internet communities including anti-vaccination groups. In recent months, coordinated Qanon campaigns pushed fringe hashtags like #Obamagate and #SubpoenaObama into trending topics that were ultimately promoted by Trump.

Some QAnon supporters have also become more organized and aggressive in attacking celebrities. QAnon followers frequently comb through social media posts and Instagram pictures of Trump’s famous political opponents, intentionally misinterpreting benign photos as proof the celebrities are eating children. The followers then target those celebrities with harassment campaigns, coordinated by influencers in the QAnon community on Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

TV personality and author Chrissy Teigen has been a constant target of harassment by QAnon and Pizzagate accounts in recent weeks. The harassment campaign has since targeted friends in her life, some of whom are private figures, who have had their Instagram accounts swarmed by conspiracy theorists posting violent threats.

This type of harassment campaign is known as “swarming” or “brigading,” and Twitter said those swarms will no longer be allowed on the platform. Twitter will ban users who threaten users during QAnon-related swarms, and limit the reach and search visibility of those who participate in them.

A Twitter spokesperson said this sort of anti-harassment policy could apply to other groups that are primarily motivated by targeted harassment in the future.

Earlier this month, QAnon conspiracy theorists falsely claimed on Twitter, Reddit, and TikTok that the furniture company Wayfair was shipping trafficked children because price glitches raised the price of pillows and cabinets to tens of thousands of dollars. The company’s name was the top trend on Twitter in the United States on July 10 as Twitter users posted links to expensive furniture.

The company released a statement reiterating that some cabinets were appropriately priced, while a glitch affected the price of the cost of some personalized pillows.

Still, the conspiracy theory has continued to rage on TikTok among some users who did not know it was initially posited by a QAnon influencer on Twitter.

Reddit has similarly banned the process of “brigading,” where users of one community target another community with harassment in a coordinated fashion, on its service.
 
The verbosity, the colloquialisms, and their opinions make that sound like it was written by the stereotypical deranged social justarian. Whoever that is they sound like a annoying piece of shit, they sound like a journalist.


A shitty journalist at that! What sappy writing.
Agreed, this definitely does not read like something written by someone who has three years to dedicate to trolling boomers. Too much interest in SA, too. Possibly written by a goon or a former goon. Oh yeah and note how the author completely glossed over why Q moved from 4chan to 8chan/8kun. Smells fishy.
 
Twitter has all the charm of a maternity ward fire. I don’t understand how It ever caught on. Everyone sounds crazy and the comments are always wild. God forbid you tweeted in 2010 that you dressed up as Apu from the Simpsons in 1989 and you once had a pimple on your ass that needed to be lanced. You piss someone off today and they will sit there for 72 hours straight in a fury with a pee jar next to them while scouring everything you ever said until they find something that they will use to blast you as a pimpled assed racist or general POS to anyone who will listen. Anyone who spends time on Twitter needs to stop it. The majority of people on Twitter are constantly angry and vicious and hopped up over virtually everything.
 
You really believe that the average QAnon conspiratard understands that there is internet beyond Twitter and Facebook?
that pastebin ist theonly spaghetti necessary.
they don't. they're mostly grandmas. church people and shit.

(edited because I linked it again for some fucking reason.)
 
The amount of fucking normies that have been drawn into Qautism is insane

I can't even log into normiebook without seeing this bullshit
The fact that it's got the media so up in arms is the only redeeming feature tbh
 
To everyone talking about how this is going to make QAnon worse: that's a feature, not a bug. I am fully convinced at this point that an unknown actor is exerting backchannel influence on social media companies to agitate the political divide in the US and try to ignite mass civil strife akin to another Civil War.
As part of this, they will censor political conspiracy theories to agitate them while simultaneously promoting Trump's election in subtle ways. When Trump is re-elected, radical groups on both sides will be discreetly pushed to "direct action", and possibly armed as well. Within six months of the re-election, we will see some kind of radical-left terrorist attack against the federal government. In response, radical-right groups will launch a symbolic attack of some kind against the Left- an attempt to kill the "traitorous" Minneapolis city council or majority black nieghborhoods in the state wouldn't surprise me. This will be the beginning of this period of civil unrest. The riots earlier this year will look like rowdy elementary-schoolers in comparison. It would not surprise me if we ended up seeing an ultimate death toll that approaches half a million over several years.


Those people are useful for the agenda: once again, the name of the game is to force people to splinter along the political divide and convince the sides that the only way to have a functional government is to kill everyone on the other side. The zeitgeist is that left-wing politics are on a triumphant rise and right-wing politics are on the decline, so the best way to do this is to convince the left that casting off the "deplorable" right is the only way for humanity to evolve, and then convince the right that the only way to stop the left from casting them off is to violently seize power and liquidate them.

I think we need to nuke China take them down in flames.

LET THEM COLLECTIVIZE ASHES.
 
I'm curious if any Kiwis who use twitter have been restricted or banned. (If you tweet wrong think, that is.)
My last account was suspended because they thought I was a spam bot for tweeting about COVID-19.

You really believe that the average QAnon conspiratard understands that there is internet beyond Twitter and Facebook?
The problem isn’t so much that as it is finding anything as widespread as FB/twitter. every attempt to clone twitter, such as gab, mastodon, quitter, etc has fallen short in comparison.
 
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BREAKING: Facebook has taken down the private group "Freedom for the Children UK", one of the most influential UK QAnon communities with just under 14,000 members. The group was responsible for a series of "Save Our Children" street rallies in the UK in 2020.

The accounts of the group's main leaders and admins, Laura Ward and Lucy Davis, have also been disabled. You can check out my long read about "Freedom for the Children UK" and how Ms Ward and Ms Davis drew thousands to their UK QAnon-themed rallies.
 
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