Twitter wants to shield survivors of the Parkland shooting from online harassment as conspiracy theories spread
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- Twitter announced it will be using "anti-spam" and "anti-abuse" tools to protect survivors of the Parkland shooting from harassment on its platform, along with verifying several of the students' accounts.
- The survivors of the shooting had been targeted for harassment, with several conspiracy theories circulating on social media that the survivors are paid actors, or that the shooting itself was a "false flag."
- Several of the Parkland shooting survivors have become outspoken critics of the gun lobby.
Twitter will be taking steps to protect the survivors of last week's shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, after some of them were targeted for harassment across social media.
"Such behavior goes against everything we stand for at Twitter, and we are taking action on any content that violates our terms of service," the company tweeted from an official account.
Several of the survivors have come under fire from far-right groups and conspiracy theorists online, who have claimed that at least one of the survivors was a paid actor, and that the shooting itself was a staged, so-called "false flag" attack. These claims, in turn, have led to the harassment that Twitter is now trying to guard the survivors against.
Specificially, Twitter says via tweet that "We are also using our anti-spam and anti-abuse tools to weed out malicious automation around these individuals and the topics they are raising. We have also verified a number of survivors' Twitter accounts."
Twitter declined to comment beyond the content of those tweets.
For their part, the survivors of the Parkland shooting, which left 17 dead and many more wounded, have entered the public debate as high-profile supporters of gun control.
However, it seems that this heightened visibility has made them more of a target: Cameron Kasky, a 17-year-old survivor of the shooting who's become an outspoken critic of the gun lobby, has said that he was forced to quit Facebook over death threats he recieved from 'NRA cultists.'
Meanwhile, Facebook and YouTube were criticized on Wednesday for promoting a video linked to these unsubtantiated conspiracy theories. It racked up as many as 200,000 views on YouTube before getting removed.
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