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posted by CoolHand on Tuesday February 21 2017, @03:35AM   Printer-friendly
from the will-they-crack-down-on-el-presidente dept.

Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard

Twitter has launched a new way to punish users for bad behavior, temporarily "limiting" their account.

Some users are receiving notices their accounts are limited for 12 hours, meaning only people who follow them can see their tweets or receive notifications. When they are retweeted, people outside their network can't see those retweets.

Some speculate these limitations are automatic based on keywords, but there is no hard evidence.

This would be fine if this was used uniformly to clamp down on harassment, but it appears to be used on people, simply for using politically incorrect language.

Source: http://heatst.com/tech/twitters-new-tool-to-crack-down-on-politically-incorrect-language/


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  • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Wednesday February 22 2017, @05:33PM

    by NotSanguine (285) <reversethis-{grO ... a} {eniugnaStoN}> on Wednesday February 22 2017, @05:33PM (#470292) Homepage Journal

    Meanwhile, a thought experiment. If (as I infer from your post) you think that Twitter should be prevented from withdrawing messages or banning people, then perhaps you might consider what would happen if you had a blog with comments, and it got infested by trolls? Would you want the ability to remove posts or ban users in order to allow your friends to use it? Or would you let something that's valuable to your and your friends die in a swamp on account of your principles? [emphasis added]

    Your inference is incorrect, so much so that I wonder about your ability to comprehend English. Perhaps you're not a native English speaker? I said:

    As for those who would censor *anyone*, the solution is to vote with your feet and your wallet. Twitter is censoring people? Don't tweet. Don't read tweets. Don't give them your attention, and let them know *why* you're not doing so. For Twitter, your attention is their profit.

    If Twitter (or any other private entity) wants to censor speech, then let them do so without your support. If enough people speak (and more importantly, act) against censorship, the more effective such efforts will be. They need us much more than we need them. [emphasis added]

    The implication is clear, at least to me: If you don't like censorship, don't support entities that engage in it. Twitter can do whatever it wants with its infrastructure.

    As for a blog being overrun by trolls, that's a somewhat different situation, given that a blog is a platform for giving a single person or a group a voice. Twitter gives voice (albeit in a limited and fairly useless way) to a myriad of people and groups. What's more, they profit from the "creativity" of their users. Perhaps you can see the difference?

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
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