Following a day-long
onslaught, in which Criado-Perez received around 50 sexually-abusive
tweets an hour, police finally arrested a 21-year-old man in Manchester
on Sunday.
The feminist champion, whose campaign resulted in the Bank of England agreeing to picture Pride and Prejudice author Jane Austen on every £10 bill,
tweeted throughout the abuse: "I actually can't keep up with the
screen-capping & reporting -- rape threats thick and fast now. If
anyone wants to report the tweets to Twitter."
Twitter UK's General Manager Tony Wang said the social-networking company takes online abuse very seriously, offering to suspend accounts, and called on people to report any "violation of Twitter rules."
But the story has ignited a backlash against the site from users and the media alike with more than 50,000 people signing on online petition urging Twitter to tackle Internet trolls.
In her letter, Cooper
wrote: "Despite the scale and seriousness of these threats, the official
response from Twitter continues to be extremely weak -- simply
directing Caroline away from Twitter towards the police, and, belatedly,
directing users to abuse-reporting forms on Twitter."
Writing in The Guardian, columnist Tanya Gold called on "misogynists" to be shamed rather than criticized,
describing the Internet trolls as "lonely, fearful and dumb," adding
that the emergence of social media "has given the vicious a voice."
Criado-Perez had her own
take on the debate being played out her Twitter account. Writing in the
Independent on Saturday, she said: "If we stand firm, and shout back as
one, we will win."
The BBC's technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones argues that Twitter now faces a "tricky dilemma" of protecting free speech while under pressure to "make the network a safer and more polite place."
Cellan-Jones believes
Twitter would prefer to see threatening Tweets referred to the police,
rather than introduce a "report abuse" button on every post, which would
require significant manpower to monitor.
Twitter has already
introduced a "report tweet" function for the iPhone and is currently
developing the option for the web and Android.
But The Telegraph's chief technology blogger Mic Wright said a report function would allow "any armchair activist to make a vague stand without putting in any time, effort or thought."
Wright recognizes that
comment sections on user-generated websites such as YouTube are the
"post-apocalyptic badlands of the web... a resting place for the
misspelled dribblings of the chronically hard-of-thinking." But he
argues the Twitter conundrum is a societal problem not a
technology-based one.
The debacle has led to a campaign for a Twitter boycott on August 4 -- International Friendship Day -- and an e-petition for a "report abuse" button on Tweets.
Author of 'How To Be a
Woman' and columnist for The Times, Caitlin Moran, proposed a
"Trolliday" where Twitter users would tweet the holding message:
"Waiting for troll solution."
Columnist Suzanne Moore also called for a celebrity shun of the social-networking site.
On Saturday, she posted: "Spread the word. Prominent guys with many
followers join in please. It's a gesture maybe but we can try a big
Twitter flounce and see?"
SOURCE:CNN
0 comments:
Post a Comment