Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Twitter removes more than half of abusive tweets automatically

Add as a preferred source on Google

Twitter now removes half of tweets containing abusive content automatically without relying on content moderators or users reporting them. 

The social media platform’s 2019 third quarter report revealed that 50% of those tweets that were removed due to abusive content were done so through improvements in machine learning. 

Recommended Videos

“We also continue to make progress on health, improving our ability to proactively identify and remove abusive content, with more than 50% of the Tweets removed for abusive content in Q3 taken down without a bystander or first-person report,” Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said in the report. 

In comparison, Twitter took down 38% of abusive content proactively in the first quarter of this year and 43% in the second quarter, according to Venture Beat. 

Twitter defines abusive content as “an attempt to harass, intimidate, or silence someone else’s voice.” 

The social network first rolled out a policy for hate speech in 2017, which included prohibiting and removing accounts affiliated with organizations that promote violence, as well as deleting tweets that glorify violence and permanently suspending users who continue to violate the policies. 

Twitter asked its users for feedback on its hateful conduct policy in September 2018, and according to a July blog post, the company received more than 8,000 responses. Some of the feedback asked for clearer language on examples of violations, narrowing down what is considered a hate group, and having more consistent enforcement for hateful speech on Twitter’s end. 

In July, Twitter updated its rules against hateful content to include any tweets that dehumanized people based on religion. Twitter already removes tweets with threats based on race, ethnicity, religious affiliation, and more, but July’s update set more precise standards for hateful content based on religion. 

Like Twitter, Facebook also uses artificial intelligence machine learning to remove content or accounts that are considered harmful proactively. Facebook uses “coordinated inauthentic behavior” as a red flag to ban accounts on its platform. The term is used to describe “when groups of pages or people work together to mislead others about who they are or what they are doing.” 

Digital Trends reached out to Twitter to comment further on the process of removing tweets automatically, and we’ll update this story once we hear back. 

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Reddit may ask you to prove you’re human as it cracks down on bot accounts
Suspicious activity could trigger human verification
Reddit

Reddit is stepping up its fight against bots, and now your account could be asked to prove it is human if the platform detects fishy behaviour.

Reddit CEO Steve Huffman says these checks will be rare, but they are meant to protect what makes Reddit work in the first place – real people talking to real people.

Read more
You are about to see a flood of product recommendations on Instagram and Facebook
Meta’s new tools let creators plug products directly in content, with Amazon and Shopee leading the first wave of in-feed buying.
facebook

The line between content and commerce just got a lot harder to see, as your Instagram and Facebook feeds are about to shift in a noticeable way.

Meta is rolling out new affiliate tools that let creators tag items directly inside posts and Reels, which means more recommendations will show up right where you’re already scrolling.

Read more
Reddit wants to check if you’re using the iPhone’s Face ID camera
The company is considering new identity tools to tackle its growing bot problem
Reddit app on iPhone

Reddit may soon ask users to prove they’re human, and it might involve your face. During a TBPN podcast, Reddit's CEO, Steve Huffman, confirmed that the platform is exploring new identity verification methods, including using Face ID or Touch ID-style authentication, to tackle its growing bot problem.

https://twitter.com/alexisohanian/status/2035154057942245514?s=20

Read more