Elon Musk's Twitter deal stirs fears of abuse in Asia, Middle East

Elon Musk's twitter account is seen on a smartphone in front of the Twitter logo in this photo illustration taken, April 15, 2022

Elon Musk's twitter account is seen on a smartphone in front of the Twitter logo in this photo illustration taken, April 15, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

What’s the context?

Musk's purchase of Twitter has raised concerns around his views on free speech and how it might lead to abuse, hate speech online

  • Minimising content moderation may spur more abuse on Twitter
  • Minorities including Rohingya, Arabs and Dalits most at risk
  • Activists call for human rights impact assessment

BANGKOK/BEIRUT - Elon Musk's plan to acquire Twitter has alarmed human rights activists in Asia and the Middle East, where social media platforms have been accused of inciting violence.

Musk has called himself a free speech absolutist and criticised Twitter's policy of moderating content. But rolling back such curbs on hate speech would put vulnerable people at risk, said Phil Robertson of advocacy group Human Rights Watch.

A promoted tweet on Twitter app is displayed on a mobile phone near a Twitter logo, in this illustration picture taken Sept. 8, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo
Go DeeperHow tweets, lies from India fuelled Hindu-Muslim unrest in UK
A woman uses her phone next to a logo of the WhatsApp application during Global Fintech Fest in Mumbai, India September 20, 2022
Go DeeperAsian innovators fight online hate, lies as tech giants fall short
The Twitter App loads on an iPhone in front of blurred out skyline
Go DeeperTwitter battles India for control of social media content

"Incitement to violence against a minority group, like we saw with the Rohingya when the platforms did not take down hate speech and abuse, is a very real danger," Robertson, deputy director for Asia, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"We could go down a very dark hole if we go down that path again," he said.

United Nations investigators said Facebook played a key role in spreading hate speech that fuelled violence against Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar in 2017, which refugees said included mass killings and rape by soldiers.

Twitter - which has faced criticism for not doing enough to stop ethnic slurs, hate speech and incitement to violence in Ethiopia where there has been fighting since 2020 - did not respond to a request for comment.

"We work hard to minimise toxic and illegal content," the company said on its website.

"We try to minimise the distribution and reach of harmful or misleading information, especially when its intent is to disrupt a civic process or cause offline harm."

A blogger and social media specialist, Hera Shabbir checks her social media accounts on her smart phone in Manama, Bahrain, April 28, 2022

A blogger and social media specialist, Hera Shabbir checks her social media accounts on her smart phone in Manama, Bahrain, April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

A blogger and social media specialist, Hera Shabbir checks her social media accounts on her smart phone in Manama, Bahrain, April 28, 2022. REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

Content moderation

In India - which is the third most popular country in the world for Twitter with about 24 million users according to research site Statista - slurs and memes on social media regularly attack Muslims and low-caste Dalits.

"The problem of caste-targeted expression and discrimination is rife, which Twitter has failed to address in a nuanced and effective manner," said Raman Jit Singh Chima, Asia policy director at digital rights group Access Now.

Musk's intent to privatise Twitter and reduce content moderation raises concerns that "more rampant online abuse can translate to offline harms against people's security and liberties," he said.

"Across Asia, we have observed incitement to violence by political actors and extremists targeting human rights defenders and minorities amplified on Twitter" in countries including India, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, he added.

Rana Ayyub, a Muslim journalist who is often critical of Hindu right-wing politicians in India, has been trolled and threatened online for her work, while in Bangladesh, gay rights activists, atheist bloggers and academics have been targeted.

Musk's proposals would put him at loggerheads with Asian governments that want tech companies to quickly remove content they deem as inappropriate, and the European Union where new rules call for more aggressive online policing of hate speech.

Twitter's policy states that targeting people based on their race, ethnicity, national origin, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, religious affiliation, age, disability, or disease "may be in violation of our hateful conduct policy".

Such tweets are reviewed and acted on, with "immediate and permanent suspension" of the accounts of those sharing violent threats, it says.

Online abuse

In the Middle East, online hate speech is rising, according to 7amleh, an Israeli-based non-profit that advocates for Palestinian digital rights, which recorded more than 620,000 online conversations involving racism and incitement last year.

Twitter accounted for 58% of incitement on social media, often targeting Arab members of parliament, it said.

"This calls for greater seriousness in dealing with hate speech, especially since this discourse leads to real world harm," said Mona Shtaya, an advocacy advisor at 7amleh.

She described Musk's proposal to end anonymity on Twitter as "dangerous, especially for peoples who live under oppressive regimes, which often pursue activists and human rights defenders based on what they publish on social media".

In Lebanon, journalist Luna Safwan was threatened online after she posted a tweet about the militant group Hezbollah's political influence - a trend seen globally with many women journalists also reporting that online abuse spills offline.

Access Now has called on Twitter to halt the sale until it sets out "concrete measures to protect human rights, regardless of who owns the company", including conducting an independent human rights impact assessment of the proposed acquisition.

That might reveal the concerns of "people who live in the majority world - the Global South", said Mishi Choudhary, legal director of the Software Freedom Law Center in Delhi, which represents the rights of internet users.

"They don't have the institutions to protect their rights, yet constantly face harassment at the hands of their own leaders and their proxies," she said.

"They are the growing future markets for all these platforms - and yet their voices are absent from the discourse."


Context is powered by the Thomson Reuters Foundation Newsroom.

Our Standards: Thomson Reuters Trust Principles


Tags

  • Twitter
  • Social media

Featured Podcast

An illustration photo shows the globe with a tree standing on top. On the left hand side, a red backed illustration shows barren trees and oil refinery towers. On the right hand side, a green backed illustration shows wind turbines and solar panels. A sound equaliser image crosses the screen to indicates audio.
6 EPISODES
Podcast

Just Transition

The human stories behind the shift to a green economy

An illustration photo shows the globe with a tree standing on top. On the left hand side, a red backed illustration shows barren trees and oil refinery towers. On the right hand side, a green backed illustration shows wind turbines and solar panels. A sound equaliser image crosses the screen to indicates audio.
Podcast



Get our data & surveillance newsletter. Free. Every week.

By providing your email, you agree to our Privacy Policy.


Latest on Context