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It’s not the social media user, it’s the platform

The Online Harms Bill provides an opportunity to change the way these companies operate

December 17, 2021 08:07
Wiley
3 min read

Last week, Twitter’s lawyers were in action in Paris. They were arguing that a court order forcing the company to reveal the phone numbers and addresses of the staff in charge of processing French tweets flagged for removal should not be upheld. The company had been successfully sued by a coalition of French NGOS, including the Union of French Jewish Students, all seeking to prove that Twitter was failing in the fight against hate speech, having found that only some 11 per cent of content that was “obviously unlawful” was being removed.

On Friday, we at the Antisemitism Policy Trust revealed the full scale of antisemitic horror on the platform. Together with the Community Security Trust and with research undertaken by the Woolf Institute, we have produced data which estimates that there are up to 495,000 explicitly antisemitic tweets in English per year.

With the UK Jewish population standing below 290,000, this is nearly two tweets annually for every single Jew in the country.

It isn’t just Twitter. This is the third report in a series which found that Google’s public facing ‘Safesearch’ facility has no impact on the amount of antisemitic content that is returned when people search for jokes about Jews. The company’s response, which boiled down to explaining that the system wasn’t designed to capture racism, underlines the problem.