Musk's Twitter disbands its Trust and Safety advisory group - Los Angeles Times
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Twitter disbands Trust and Safety advisory group hours before it was to meet

Elon Musk waving
Twitter, under new owner Elon Musk, has dissolved the advisory group formed in 2016 to address content problems on the platform.
(Miguel Roberts / Brownsville Herald)
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Twitter under new owner Elon Musk has dissolved its Trust and Safety Council, the advisory group of around 100 independent civil, human rights and other organizations that the company formed in 2016 to address hate speech, child exploitation, suicide, self-harm and other problems on the platform.

The council had been scheduled to meet with Twitter representatives Monday night. But Twitter informed the group via email that it was being disbanded shortly before the meeting was to take place, according to multiple members.

The council members, who provided images of the email from Twitter to the Associated Press, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. The email said that Twitter was “reevaluating how best to bring external insights” and that the council is “not the best structure to do this.”

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“Our work to make Twitter a safe, informative place will be moving faster and more aggressively than ever before and we will continue to welcome your ideas going forward about how to achieve this goal,” said the email, which was signed “Twitter.”

The volunteer group provided expertise and guidance on how Twitter could better combat hate, harassment and other harms but didn’t have any decision-making authority and didn’t review specific content disputes. Shortly after buying Twitter for $44 billion in late October, Musk said he would form a new “content moderation council” to help make major decisions but later changed his mind.

“Twitter’s Trust and Safety Council was a group of volunteers who over many years gave up their time when consulted by Twitter staff to offer advice on a wide range of online harms and safety issues,” tweeted council member Alex Holmes. “At no point was it a governing body or decision making.”

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The team tasked with stopping child sexual exploitation on the platform was stretched before the cuts, but now only a skeleton crew remains.

Nov. 29, 2022

Twitter, which is based in San Francisco, had confirmed the meeting with the council Thursday in an email in which it promised an “open conversation and Q&A” with Twitter staff, including the new head of trust and safety, Ella Irwin.

That came on the same day that three council members announced they were resigning in a public statement posted on Twitter that said: “Contrary to claims by Elon Musk, the safety and wellbeing of Twitter’s users are on the decline.”

Those former council members soon became the target of online attacks after Musk amplified criticism of them and Twitter’s past leadership for allegedly not doing enough to stop child sexual exploitation on the platform.

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“It is a crime that they refused to take action on child exploitation for years!” Musk tweeted.

Peiter Zatko, Twitter’s ex-head of security, said he burned 10 handwritten notebooks and deleted 100 computer files at the behest of company managers as part of severance agreement, according to unsealed court filings.

Oct. 10, 2022

A growing number of attacks on the council led to concerns from some remaining members, who sent an email to Twitter earlier Monday demanding that the company stop misrepresenting the council’s role.

Those false accusations by Twitter leaders were “endangering current and former Council members,” the email said.

The Trust and Safety Council, in fact, had as one of its advisory groups one that focused on child exploitation. This included the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, the Rati Foundation and YAKIN, or Youth Adult Survivors & Kin in Need.

Former Twitter employee Patricia Cartes, whose job it was to form the council in 2016, said Monday that its dissolution “means there’s no more checks and balances.” Cartes said the company sought to bring a global outlook to the council, with experts from around the world who could relay concerns about how new Twitter policies or products might affect their communities.

The exodus of key employees may threaten Twitter’s ability to comply with regulations designed to protect users’ data.

Dec. 2, 2022

She contrasted that with Musk’s current practice of surveying his Twitter followers before making a policy change affecting how content gets moderated.

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“He doesn’t really care as much about what experts think,” she said.

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