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Regulus Tera

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Oct 25, 2017
19,458
https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/...-mean-banning-some-republican-politicians-too

In separate discussions verified by Motherboard, that employee said Twitter hasn't taken the same aggressive approach to white supremacist content because the collateral accounts that are impacted can, in some instances, be Republican politicians.

The employee argued that, on a technical level, content from Republican politicians could get swept up by algorithms aggressively removing white supremacist material. Banning politicians wouldn't be accepted by society as a trade-off for flagging all of the white supremacist propaganda, he argued.

There is no indication that this position is an official policy of Twitter, and the company told Motherboard that this "is not [an] accurate characterization of our policies or enforcement—on any level." But the Twitter employee's comments highlight the sometimes overlooked debate within the moderation of tech platforms: are moderation issues purely technical and algorithmic, or do societal norms play a greater role than some may acknowledge?

The rest of the article is a discussion on the dangers and bias of internet moderation, but this excerpt is just chilling.

EDIT: That was supposed to be a colon lol, can a mod fix the title?
 
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