Thursday, 15 October 2020

Twitter And Facebook Declare Open War On Conservatives After New York Post Story On Hunter Biden’s Secret Ukraine Emails Show Sleepy Joe Lied

 

New post on Now The End Begins

Twitter And Facebook Declare Open War On Conservatives After New York Post Story On Hunter Biden’s Secret Ukraine Emails Show Sleepy Joe Lied

by Geoffrey Grider

twitter-facebook-limit-sharing-new-york-post-story-joe-biden-hunter-ukraine-emails-social-media-censorship

Facebook and Twitter took action on Wednesday to limit the distribution of a New York Post story making unconfirmed claims about Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, leading President Trump's campaign and allies to charge the companies with censorship.

There is outrage tonight all across social media as Conservatives are finding their articles not being allowed to be shared, and in some cases, finding themselves locked out of their accounts on Twitter and Facebook. Why is this happening? Because the New York Post released a story showing emails from Hunter Biden proving that Democratic candidate for president Joe Biden lied repeatedly about what he knew about the Burisma Ukraine scandal. When that much truth gets out 20 days before the election, the Liberals who run Twitter and Facebook start turning off Conservative voices. It's the only way they can win, but as we see, it is only increasing voter support for President Trump.

On our Monday Prophecy News Podcast, we told you as we have been telling you all year that the social media purge is coming. the purge is here. Follow us on Parler.com @NTEB.

creepy-democrat-joe-biden-lied-about-son-hunter-emails-burisma-ukraine-coverup

LEGIT BOMBSHELL AS IT’S REVEALED DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN LIED ABOUT INVOLVEMENT WITH SON HUNTER AND UKRAINE BURISMA SCANDAL

Facebook And Twitter Limit Sharing New York Post Story About Joe Biden Prompting Outcry Of Censorship

FROM NPR: Both social media companies said the moves were aimed at slowing the spread of potentially false information. But they gave few details about how they reached their decisions, sparking criticism about the lack of clarity and consistency with which they apply their rules.

The New York Post story published on Wednesday cited emails, purportedly sent by Biden's son Hunter, that the news outlet says it got from President Donald Trump's private lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and former Trump adviser Steve Bannon.

Censorship should be condemned!

cc: @Twitter & Facebook

NOT the American way‼����

— Kayleigh McEnany (@PressSec) October 14, 2020

Facebook was limiting distribution of the story while its outside fact checkers reviewed its claims, spokesman Andy Stone said. That means the platform's algorithms won't place posts linking to the story as highly in people's news feeds, reducing the number of users who see it. However, the story has still been liked, shared or commented on more than 290,000 times on Facebook, according data from CrowdTangle, a research tool owned by Facebook.

Stone said Facebook sometimes takes this step if it sees "signals" that something gaining traction is false, to give fact-checkers time to evaluate the story before it spreads widely. He did not give more detail on what signals Facebook uses or how often it takes this approach.

Twitter went further. It is blocking users from posting pictures of the emails or links to the Post stories referring to them, spokesman Trenton Kennedy said, citing its rules against "directly distributingcontent obtained through hacking that contains private information."

Users who try to share the link on Twitter are shown a notice saying, "We can't complete this request because this link has been identified by Twitter or our partners as being potentially harmful." If a user clicks on a link already posted on Twitter, they are taken to a warning screen saying "this link may be unsafe," which they have to click past in order to read the story. Twitter also required the Post to delete its tweet about the story, Kennedy said.

Twitter said it decided to block the story because it couldn't be sure about the origins of the emails. But the company declined to comment on how it had reached that decision or what evidence it had weighed. READ MORE

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