🐱 Why Twitter Suspensions Do More Harm Than Good

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CatParty

On Apr. 6, I was out celebrating a friend’s birthday when I received an email from Twitter support (on a Saturday night, no less) telling me I’d been suspended for a week, and would have limited functionality.

I’d be able to log in, read tweets, and send and receive direct messages. But I wouldn’t be able to post for the next seven days, nor could I retweet or like posts.

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The offending tweet, which Twitter helpfully allowed me to delete immediately, was one in a reply from nearly a week earlier. It was deemed as “encouraging self-harm,” for telling someone to take a large amount of the antipsychotic thorazine, though that wasn’t the intention, and it’s clear that nobody else thought so either, since it took days for anyone to be offended.

Also, “death” isn’t actually a symptom of a thorazine overdose.

It’s possible that the tweet was mass reported by conspiracy theory believers, since I write so much about the QAnon conspiracy theory. Or maybe it really bothered someone. No matter the case, I was the latest person to fall victim to Twitter’s apparently arbitrary application of its rules for locking and suspending accounts.

Because I’ve reported many tweets. Most haven’t resulted in the slightest thing happening to their posters. My tweet certainly wasn’t any more inflammatory than this one, which I unsuccessfully reported to Twitter for indicating that unspecified people with my last name should skinned:

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Or this apparently inoffensive one, which told me that the “day of the rope,” a popular concept in white nationalist literature where journalists are wholesale executed, is approaching:

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What is the difference between “you are about to be hanged,” “the world wants you hanged,” and “prepare to be hanged?” Twitter support didn’t respond when I asked them, because I honestly don’t know. Does anyone? They sure seem not to.

Regardless, I’d been suspended for my tweet. I immediately appealed, but expected nothing from it, and indeed, I also heard nothing back about it. And just like that, I’d been removed from the community I interact with the most online.

While almost entirely made of people I’ve never met, my Twitter social circle matters to me, and I matter to it. People started asking where I was, and I couldn’t respond. I was working on stories and couldn’t tweet at people to ask them to follow me so I could direct message them. I couldn’t weigh in on topics in my field of expertise, nor could I fight back against organized trolling attempts.

I was silenced. And it’s clear from conservative rhetoric on social media, I’m not the only person who’s had their voice temporarily stifled, and feel they’ve been censored.

The modern conspiracy theory movement is almost entirely an online phenomenon. It’s made of people who rarely, if ever interact in person, but spend hours at a time reading, sharing, and “researching” material that purports to show them “the truth” about what’s really going on in our society and politics. These online circles are real and important to the people who are in them, serving as alternate communities and even a kind of family.

One can see these communities at work in the explosive growth of the QAnon conspiracy theory, where throngs of baby boomers in Q merchandise swamp Trump rallies to the point of the Secret Service barring them from entering. It’s also at work in groundless fear over chemtrails in the sky poisoning their bodies, 5G internet warping their brains, and cadres of powerful financiers and politicians controlling their destiny.

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These communities, while propagating some of the worst abuses of critical thinking, also serve as a lifeline to the outside world.

It’s one of the reasons why conservative fearsover Twitter “shadowbanning” and censorship on platforms like YouTube are such a common grievance: it’s not just reducing their brand viability, it’s literally cutting banned or limited users off from their social circles. It’s social dislocation at its worst.

I’d never put much credence in these claims, since many of the people making them have actually tweeted things that were either dangerous conspiracy theories or straight up abusive. But when I was locked out of my Twitter account under dubious circumstances, I understood why conspiracy theories about Twitter censorship and “shadowbanning” have so much traction.

The suspension was disproportional, seemed to be at random (or even worse, the work of trolls actively working to silence me), and my appeal ignored. Of course, I felt censored. Of course, I wanted to blame Twitter for the seemingly arbitrary policies that were aimed at me.

And of course, I thought the people who were on the opposite end of the spectrum of my reporting were to blame.

And yet, I also realized that to cry “censorship!” and “First Amendment!” would be at odds with how I fundamentally approach social media. It’s their playground, not mine, and they can kick me out of it for any reasonthey deem to violate their terms of service. That those terms are nebulous and often seemingly contradictory isn’t relevant to the fact that they are, in fact, theirs.

So much of the grievance on social media is based on a misdirected application of how free speech works, and I didn’t want to add to that noise. So I kept silent, DM’ed a few people to help share a story I’d written, and moved on with my life. Until the moment my suspension lifted, of course, when I immediately explained what happened.

We’ve seen over and over how major social media networks and content aggregators are struggling to keep up with the onslaught of conspiracy theories, racism, anti-Semitism, extremism, misogyny, abuse, and threats that their services are overwhelmed with.

YouTube’s algorithm puts an endless buffet of conspiracy theory videos at one’s fingers, while Twitter is overwhelmed by white nationalists and incels, and Facebook is a petri dish for fake news. Users beg for fewer Nazis, more tools to report abuse, more consistent moderation. And they get nothing but vague promises for changes in the future, and suspensions that don’t change anyone’s behavior.

I’m far from the only one suspended wrongly, and far from the only one who has reported terrible posts, only to be told by an anonymous support account that I’m the one with the problem.

Ultimately, it’s on users to police themselves. Don’t make it worse. Don’t spread fake news. Don’t tell people to kill themselves. Don’t say things to strangers you wouldn’t say to your mother.

And if you get pinched, realize that you’ve been caught in a system that’s run by people who are perpetually in over their heads.

Even if they still need to do better.
 
Tl,dr: it's appalling that we get banned unfairly, also surely there is no relation to our incessant attempts to get others banned unfairly.
 
"Twitter Suspensions Suck When They Happen to me, But I'm Glad Everyone I Disagree With Gets Suspended for Joke Tweets"
 
Or this apparently inoffensive one, which told me that the “day of the rope,” a popular concept in white nationalist literature where journalists are wholesale executed, is approaching:

Jesus fucking.....how goddamn conceited and self centred do you have to be to spin a concept which is literally "HANG ALL NIGGERS AND RACE TRAITORS" into some "THEY GONNA KILL ALL JOURNALISTS1!! THIS IS SRS AND SCARY GUYS!" hysteria?!

Its like hearing about the Rwandan genocide and your only concern being that the fucking beyblade community in Rwanda might be affected. Seriously this is straight up "Armageddon happens: Journalists most affected" territory
 
It was deemed as “encouraging self-harm,” for telling someone to take a large amount of the antipsychotic thorazin
Also, “death” isn’t actually a symptom of a thorazine overdose.
What's your fucking point, snowy? Telling someone to chuck large amounts of meds is sure as fuck not going to feel pleasant anyway. If I hope your legs get sawed off, you're sure as fuck going to take that just as well. Taking responsibility for every little shitting thing you "didn't mean" sure is a utopia you fucking deserved, innit?

Ultimately, it’s on users to police themselves. Don’t make it worse. Don’t spread fake news. Don’t tell people to kill themselves. Don’t say things to strangers you wouldn’t say to your mother.
I bet you tell your mom to remember to take her jug of Thorazine you cunt.
 
Twitter's only supposed to ban my enemies, not me! It's not fair! Moooooooom!
because of your cow avatar, I read that as "Moooooooo!"

Its like hearing about the Rwandan genocide and your only concern being that the fucking beyblade community in Rwanda might be affected. Seriously this is straight up "Armageddon happens: Journalists most affected" territory
Community Watch thread when?
 
Twitter rules applied to this guy:
This is the result of nazi trolls who fall for conspiracy theories, and twitters allows it through inconsistent rules. Shadow banning hurts people and cuts them off from the world.

Applied to everybody else: take that nazi
 
Who takes twitter seriously anyways? The whole platform has been weaponized. I dont give a fuck about other people's opinions - and give little about my own, so i'm hardly like to give a rats about someone elses opinion of another person's opinion.
And anyway, I really doubt that someone reading "Go blow your brains out" has actually led to any one doing that.
 
What is the difference between “you are about to be hanged,” “the world wants you hanged,” and “prepare to be hanged?” Twitter support didn’t respond when I asked them, because I honestly don’t know. Does anyone? They sure seem not to.

The words used that their algorithm can pick up on.

Seriously, 90% of Twitter is automated and it’s a mess. I once made a side twitter that was banned seconds after creation for ‘suspicious activity’, then had to wait four days before a second robot reviewed it and decided to remove it. I don’t know how hard it is for journalists like this to grasp that people aren’t manually reviewing this stuff because Twitter doesn’t care.
 
If I was twitter, I would just ban all political discussion on the site. I have yet to see an interesting political discussion on twitter. Even when cows get into "politics" it isn't even that funny or interesting. But for twitter, they've just become this weird battleground for people to pick fights and be unpleasant to one another. its all garbage.
 
Who takes twitter seriously anyways? The whole platform has been weaponized. I dont give a fuck about other people's opinions - and give little about my own, so i'm hardly like to give a rats about someone elses opinion of another person's opinion.
And anyway, I really doubt that someone reading "Go blow your brains out" has actually led to any one doing that.
Let's just say that if somebody telling you to go off yourself online and you do it you had way more problems that the randy who told you to commit sudoku.
 
I hope this poor, brave woman finds justice.

EDIT: my bad guys i thought this was the thread about the teenager who was burned to death for reporting sexual harrassment. Yeah it’s a tragedy this dude got suspended or whatever i guess
 
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Let's just say that if somebody telling you to go off yourself online and you do it you had way more problems that the randy who told you to commit sudoku.
I agree. In which case, if a person has issues to that extent, then its likely to happen sooner or later. People have been topping themselves for aeons. Has twitter made things worse?
 
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