Should gammon slur be banned on Twitter?
Twitter has
asked its members to help shape new rules banning "dehumanising
speech", in which people are compared to animals or objects.
It said
language that made people seem "less than human" had repercussions.
The social
network already has a hateful-conduct policy but has been accused of bias for
allowing some types of insulting language to remain online.
For example,
countless tweets describing middle-aged white men as "gammon" can be
found on the platform.
At present,
some derogatory language is deemed to be a clear violation of Twitter's
existing hateful-conduct policy.
It bans
insults based on a person's:
race
ethnicity
nationality
sexual orientation
sex
gender
religious beliefs
age
disability
medical condition
But
Twitter's critics have used the hashtag #verifiedhate to highlight examples of
what they believe to be bias in what the platform judges to be unacceptable.
The
"gammon" insult gained popularity after a collage of contributors to
the BBC's Question Time programme - each middle-aged, white and male - was
shared along with the phrase "Great Wall of Gammon" in 2017.
Twitter said
it intended to prohibit dehumanising language towards people "in an
identifiable group" because researchers had shown it could lead to
real-world violence.
Asked
whether calling men "gammon" would count as dehumanising speech, the
company said it would first seek the views of its members.
The scope of
"identifiable groups" covered by the new rules will be decided after
a public consultation that will run until 9 October.
"This
consultation is the time for people, experts and free expression groups to be
involved in the development of a policy that will protect individuals and
groups," said Nick Pickles, senior policy strategist for Twitter.
Mr Pickles
said that all views would be welcome in the consultation and that the company
would be transparent about the results.
He
recognised that some people might tell Twitter it should not block
"dehumanising speech" since it would stifle free expression.
"We
think it's really important to have outside input, for the health of the
platform. It's about being transparent about how we develop our
processes," he told the BBC.
"It's a
genuine commitment from the company to be more accountable to our users."
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