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Twitter says it has stopped policing COVID-19 misinformation under Musk

A smartphone displays the Twitter app icon.
As of Nov. 23, Twitter has stopped enforcing a rule that labeled falsehoods about COVID-19, provided corrective information and removed inaccurate tweets.
(Associated Press)
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Twitter said it ended a policy designed to suppress false or misleading information about COVID-19, part of Elon Musk’s polarizing mission to remake the social network as a place for unmoderated speech.

By discarding the COVID rule, the company will no longer apply labels to posts containing falsehoods about the disease or provide supplemental corrective information as it did before. It will apparently no longer remove inaccurate tweets or ban offending accounts either.

The company disclosed the change in a note added to a page on its website outlining the old COVID policy. It says Twitter stopped enforcing the rule on Nov. 23.

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Twitter didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Sky News reported on the revision earlier Tuesday.

More than 11,000 accounts had been suspended and more than 97,000 pieces of misleading content had been removed from the time Twitter introduced the COVID policy in January 2020 to when it ended last week, according to data on Twitter’s website.

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Twitter has received frequent criticism for its lack of action against disinformation and misinformation over the last decade. The critiques were heightened during the presidency of Donald Trump due to his controversial and prolific tweeting, including posts that violated Twitter’s policies on coronavirus misinformation. Musk moved to reinstate Trump’s Twitter account this month, though the former president has yet to post from it.

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