Twitter is standing by its earlier decision to keep up a
series of graphic anti-Muslim videos retweeted by President Trump
earlier this week — though it’s attempting to reframe its reason for
doing so.
CEO Jack Dorsey took to the site to
retract an earlier statement that Twitter support had left the videos
live due to their being “newsworthy for public interest,” a guideline
it’s invoked numerous times when criticized about its decision to leave
up presidential tweets. The site now says that, while it wasn’t wrong to
keep the content up, its original justification for doing so was
wrong.
“We mistakenly pointed to the wrong reason
we didn’t take action on the videos from earlier this week,” the
executive explained, echoing Twitter’s official statement that, “these
videos are permitted on Twitter based on our current media policy.”
Dorsey added, however that the site is,
“still looking critically at all of our current policies, and appreciate
all the feedback.” He pointed to recently announced plans to update
site guidelines, as Twitter has come under increasing scrutiny over what
it does and doesn’t pull from the site. Early last month,
it posted a new version of its rules, highlighting thing like abusive
behavior, adult content and graphic violence — all said, however, it’s
tough to see how the Trump RTed videos aren’t covered by that last
point.
On Wednesday, the President retweeted a
trio of videos by far-right British politician Jayda Fraser that
purported to show Muslims performing violent acts. Conservative British
Prime Minister Theresa May took Trump to task, calling him “wrong” for
promoting “hateful narratives.”
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders
stood by the President once again, even as the veracity of the videos
were called into question by many mainstream press outlets. “Whether it
is a real video,” she told the press, “the threat is real.”
Among other things, Twitter’s new stance
on the subject appears to be a response to reports proving at least one
of the videos was not what it claimed to be. The company's original
explanation was met with a fair amount of pushback on social media, and
this time out, things don't appear to be going much better for the
site.
It's yet another in a long list of missteps that have made 2017 an on-going PR disaster for Twitter. Just this week, the site apologized for accidentally pulling a New York Times account over a tweet promoting a story about Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that it accidentally flagged as offensive.
Recent months have also found the service in hot
water for temporarily blocking actress Rose McGowan over a tweet about
Harvey Weinstein and verifying white nationalist Jason Kessler.
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