Twitter bans Russia Today and Sputnik from advertising on its service
28/10/17
Twitter says that it will ban ads from two Russian media organisations,
citing allegations by US intelligence agencies that Russia Today (RT) and
Sputnik tried to interfere with the 2016 presidential election in the US.
"Twitter has made the policy decision to off-board advertising from all
accounts owned by Russia Today (RT) and Sputnik, effective immediately,"
the San Francisco-based company said on its website on Thursday.
The site said the decision was based on its own investigations of RT and
Sputnik as well as the "US
intelligence community's conclusion that both RT and Sputnik attempted to
interfere with the election on behalf of the Russian government".
RT and Sputnik condemned the move, and Moscow
threatened retaliatory measures.
The ban comes a month after Twitter officials told the US senate that
it has suspended 201 Russian-linked accounts amid a congressional investigation
into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election.
US intelligence officials suspect social networks may have contributed in Moscow's alleged
propaganda attempt to help elect President Donald Trump. Russia denies
the allegation and Trump has also denied any collusion.
In its statement on Thursday, Twitter said it did not "come to this
decision lightly".
It also said it will donate the estimated $1.9m it had earned from RT since
2011 to "support external research into the use of Twitter in civil
engagement and elections, including use of malicious automation and
misinformation".
RT and Sputnik may remain "organic users on our platform, in accordance
with the Twitter rules," it said.
Sputnik, RT hit back
In response, Sputnik called Twitter's decision "regrettable",
while RT said it had "never been involved in any illegal activity online"
and "never pursued an agenda of influencing the US election through any platforms,
including Twitter".
RT also said Twitter had encouraged it to "spend big" on
advertising in advance of the election.
"The main idea pitched by Twitter to RT was 'to take a stand'. The more
money RT spent, the bigger the reach to American voters that Twitter would
provide," it said on its website.
Maria Zakharova, a spokeswoman for Russia's foreign ministry, said in
a Facebook post that the ban was "an unprecedented attack" and a
"gross violation" of free speech guarantees.
"This is the result of pressure from the American establishment and
intelligence services," she said, adding, "Retaliatory measures will
naturally follow".
'Vague rules'
Ryan Radia, of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a US-based
think-tank, said the ban was "a sign that political pressure is
succeeding and changing the behaviour of social media platforms".
Such decisions may end up "making it harder for some people to spread
both false and true information", he told Al Jazeera.
Leonid Ragozin, a Latvia-based journalist who covers Russian affairs, said
he feared Moscow
may use the ban as an excuse to impose new restrictions on the use of internet
in the country, or even shut down Twitter.
"There's also the ethical issue," he said. "This matter has
not been taken to court and there has been no trial. It was never proved that
RT and Sputnik were doing anything illegal."
"It would be more helpful if Twitter focused on bots rather than RT and
Sputnik," he said, referring to anonymous accounts and automated accounts.
"And it would be much better to invest in teaching audiences in using
information properly, to check information and be sceptical about sources of
information."
Twitter also risked appearing partial by imposing a ban on Russia-linked
agencies, he said.
"If you look at the Russia bashing info-warriors, some of them employ
as much lies, as much misinformation as Russia-linked agencies do," added
Ragozin.
Padraig Reidy, a former editor at Index on Censorship, a UK-based free
speech group, said greater transparency would be a better approach.
"It's a little vague what the rules are," he said.
"The first step is to be very clear on who is advertising and who is
paying for the adverts. They [social media companies] have to show they know
where the money is coming from."
All comments [ 10 ]
RT has also called Twitter’s ban a “coordinated attack on Russian media and freedom of speech.”
RT and Sputnik, two state-sponsored Russian news outlets that the U.S. intelligence community has said tried to interfere with the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
The decision would start an information war between the US and Russia
Twitter's decision violates the freedom of speech
RT and Sputnik condemned the move, and Moscow threatened retaliatory measures
The US is trying to prevent the civil right to access information of the people
Twitter also said this week it will disclose more information on political ads.
The US is afraid of Russia's information company, they don't want the opposite ideas
It's not a smart decision of Twitter! It obeyed the US government
This is the result of pressure from the American establishment and intelligence services
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