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Twitter, Facebook lock down Trump after social media-fueled riot in D.C.

A number of prominent figures in the technology industry took to social media Wednesday to criticize the platforms' role as enablers of a tumultuous attempt to seize the U.S. Capitol. Read More...
Supporters of President Donald Trump climb the west wall of the the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)
Supporters of President Trump climb the west wall of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

The violent pro-Trump mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday took shape on social media.

Before they crossed police barricades, battered down doors and forced lawmakers to evacuate the House and Senate chambers in the midst of a vote to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election, and before they attended an earlier rally led by President Trump that falsely undermined the legitimacy of the election results, the men and women who wrought chaos in the U.S. capital planned for Wednesday’s event on websites such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Parler.

A number of prominent figures in the technology industry took to the same platforms on Wednesday to criticize their role as enablers of this tumultuous attempt to seize the seat of U.S. government.

“Blame for the violence today will appropriately fall on Trump and his enablers on Capitol Hill and in right-wing media,” said Roger McNamee, a tech investor and early advisor to Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg. “But internet platforms — Facebook, Instagram, Google, YouTube, Twitter, and others — have played a central role.”

McNamee’s argument, that internet platforms have created algorithms that amplify hate speech, disinformation and conspiracy theories, while only selectively enforcing their terms of service to encourage more user engagement and ad revenue, resonated with others, who called for Twitter in particular to ban the president from his preferred platform.

Alex Stamos, a Stanford professor and former Facebook chief security officer, said policies the platforms have relied on in the past should no longer apply given the heightened stakes. “There have been good arguments for private companies to not silence elected officials, but all those arguments are predicated on the protection of constitutional governance,” Stamos wrote on Twitter. “Twitter and Facebook have to cut him off. There are no legitimate equities left and labeling won’t do it.”

Twitter declined to comment on the specific question of removing Trump from the platform, but tweeted a general statement about the ongoing events. “In regard to the ongoing situation in Washington, D.C., we are working proactively to protect the health of the public conversation occurring on the service and will take action on any content that violates the Twitter Rules,” the company wrote.

“Threats of and calls to violence are against the Twitter Rules, and we are enforcing our policies accordingly,” it continued, adding that the company is exploring “other escalated enforcement actions.” Those escalated enforcement actions came just hours later.

After the violence at the Capitol broke out, Trump posted a video reiterating his false claims of election fraud and urging his supporters to be peaceful. The video, posted to Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, served as a test case for how platforms are responding in real time.

Twitter first labeled the video, noting in small lettering below that Trumps claims were “disputed” and retweets and likes on the post would be restricted “due to a risk of violence.” But later in the afternoon, the company deleted the post containing the video entirely, along with two other posts from Wednesday, marking the first time the platform had fully deleted anything posted by the president.

Just after 4 p.m., the company took an additional step, announcing that the president’s personal twitter account would be locked for 12 hours — but only if he deleted the three posts that it had already removed from public view. If he refused to delete those posts himself, then his account would remain locked indefinitely, the company added.

YouTube took down the video and it was working to promote authoritative news sources on the site’s home page and in search results and recommendations. “As the situation at the United States Capitol Building unfolds, our teams are working to quickly remove livestreams and other content that violates our policies, including those against incitement to violence or regarding footage of graphic violence,” YouTube spokesman Farshad Shadloo said in a statement. “We will remain vigilant in the coming hours.”

Shortly after that, Facebook followed suit, also moving to take down the video. “This is an emergency situation and we are taking appropriate emergency measures, including removing President Trump’s video. We removed it because on balance we believe it contributes to rather than diminishes the risk of ongoing violence,” tweeted Guy Rosen, vice president of integrity at Facebook. Later in the evening, the company announced that it was suspending the president’s page for 24 hours.

In a blog post on the day’s activity, Rosen said he and his team were “treating the events as an emergency.” He said the company’s response would include searching for and removing content that supported the storming of the Capitol, including photos and videos from the scene, content that called for armed protests or protests violating the 8 p.m. curfew in Washington, D.C., or calls to “restage violence tomorrow or in the coming days.”

Rosen defended the company’s vigilance in banning armed or violence-inciting protest groups such as the Oathkeepers or groups associated with the QAnon conspiracy theory, and added that the company will be taking the new measures of increasing the requirement of Facebook group administrators to approve posts, automatically disabling comments on content that draws high levels of hate speech or violence-inciting commentary, and more broadly using automatic systems to suppress the spread of content that may violate their policies.

But the Wednesday event had been organized on social media platforms for months. One Facebook group, Red State Secession, was run by a group that explicitly called for a revolution oJan. 6. The group cited as calls to arms four tweets from President Trump asking supporters to attend events on Wednesday. Facebook finally shut down the group Wednesday afternoon, after Buzzfeed reporter Ryan Mac brought the group to light on Twitter.

“It was only a matter of time before extremism cultivated online made the leap into the real world,” McNamee said.

Online organizing has been used in the past to plan right-wing violence in Michigan and Wisconsin, and McNamee noted that social media was used to plan violent counter-protests during last summer’s wave of protests against racist policing in cities such as Minneapolis, Louisville, and Portland. “Internet platforms, Facebook in particular, played a central role in the organizing of extremist violence in those cities, as well as in Washington, DC today.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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