Twitter too slow to act on abusive content: British MP Yvette Cooper

She has written to Twitter, asking it to explain its methodology and timescales for removing graphic pictures and sexually explicit messages.
Twitter too slow to act on abusive content: British MP Yvette Cooper
Twitter too slow to act on abusive content: British MP Yvette Cooper
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A British Labour Party leader has accused Twitter of acting too slow while taking down graphic images of suspected rape and abuse cases even after such tweets were reported.

According to a report in The Guardian on Monday, Yvette Cooper who also founded the "Reclaim the Internet" campaign on online abuse has written to Twitter, asking it to explain its methodology and timescales for removing graphic pictures and sexually explicit messages.

"Twitter plays a really important role in breaking news, stimulating debate, raising public awareness of major events and allowing people simply to keep in touch with friends and family.

"But that's why it's so important that this is a platform that isn't poisoned by abuse, violent threats and intimidation," Cooper was quoted as saying. 

The letter seeks from Twitter the details of the average time taken to investigate reports and take down tweets, and its policy on the removal of tweets and suspension of accounts.

The letter further asked the micro-blogging site about the number of employers who actively keep a tab on abusive content.
The comments from Cooper surfaced after images of an apparent rape and of a woman who posed in a sexually explicit way while being tied on a bed, appeared on the social media platform. Though the accounts were suspended shortly after they were flagged and reported, Cooper has accused Twitter of being too slow and doing too little.

Cooper and her team has also alleged, on the basis of data they gathered, that threats and abuses to female British MPs remained visible on Twitter for over a week.

"Twitter claims to stop hate speech but they just don't do it in practice. Vile racist, misogynist and threatening abuse gets reported to them but they are too slow to act, so they just keep giving a platform to hatred and extremism," Cooper noted.

After the official figures showed a 20% rise in hate crime in the first quarter of this year, the Crown Prosecution Service announced to treat online hate crime as seriously as offences carried out face to face.

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