Bloomberg
Police visited Twitter Inc’s empty offices in India following the company’s decision to label multiple tweets from accounts linked to the country’s ruling party as manipulated media.
The unexpected visit happened late Monday after Twitter labelled multiple tweets for violating its synthetic and manipulated media policy, a person familiar with the matter confirmed. The policy forbids users from sharing things that “deceptively promote synthetic or manipulated media that are likely to cause harm.â€
Twitter’s offices globally have been shut since March 2020, with only Sydney presently open. It is not immediately clear why the police
undertook the action.
The tweets from various BJP-linked accounts posted a document they alleged was from India’s rival Congress party, specifying failures by Prime Minister Narendra Modi over his handling of the coronavirus.
Congress has complained publicly that the document was “forged†and the social media company labeled a handful of the tweets promoting it as “manipulated media.â€
“Congress has filed the complaint. Police have the right to inquire about it,†said R.P. Singh, a BJP spokesman, on Tuesday. “Twitter has also marked the tweet as ‘manipulated media’. Now Twitter must show the proof.â€
Among the tweets that were labeled was one from BJP spokesman Sambit Patra, which angered members of the country’s leading political party who felt Twitter acted inappropriately. A Twitter spokesman declined to comment.
“BJP’s dictatorial behavior will not last, the people of India will not be silenced, the truth will not be silenced,†Congress leader K.C. Venugopal said in a tweet. “Delhi police searching Twitter India offices to cover up for BJP’s fraud, prove how afraid they of their lies being revealed.â€
Twitter last month removed or restricted access to more than 50 posts at the behest of the Indian government, including tweets that criticized its handling of the coronavirus pandemic. The company has also previously applied its manipulated media policy to U.S. politicians, including former president Donald Trump.
The social media giant permanently suspended more than 500 accounts and blocked access to hundreds of others in India earlier this year during farm protests, acceding to a government order to limit misinformation and inflammatory content.