Twitter

Twitter Will Now Hide, Suppress Spread Of Government Officials’ Tweets That Violate Its Guidelines

If you’ve wondered how government officials like Donald Trump are still on Twitter after appearing to repeatedly violate the platform’s policies against posting hateful content and violent threats…well, you’re not alone.

In 2017, addressing an incident where Trump tweeted a potential declaration of war against North Korea, Twitter said that it holds all accounts to the same rules, but also has a set of considerations when it looks at whether a rule-breaking tweet or account should be deleted. One of those considerations is whether the tweet and/or account has a particular “newsworthiness” or is “of public interest,” the platform tweeted from its public policy account.

That caveat is what has allowed Trump and other political leaders, along with their troubling tweets, to remain on Twitter.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Now, though, Twitter is introducing a new feature that will prevent rule-breaking tweets from being seen quite so often. The feature will hide policy-violating tweets from certain public officials under a notice reading, “The Twitter Rules about abusive behavior apply to this Tweet. However, Twitter has determined that it may be in the public’s interest for this Tweet to remain available.”

If a user wishes to see the tweet, they must manually tap the ‘View’ button alongside the notice. Tweets that have this notice will also appear less frequently across the platform, and won’t appear in users’ ‘Notifications’ or ‘Explore’ tabs.

You can see how the notice will look in this mock-up from Twitter:

“In the past, we’ve allowed certain Tweets that violated our rules to remain on Twitter because they were in the public’s interest, but it wasn’t clear when and how we made those determinations,” the platform said in a blog post about the new feature. It adds that the notice is meant to “provide additional clarity” about which tweets it recognizes as rule-breaking, but judges worth keeping around.

As we mentioned above, not all accounts will have this feature enabled. To have the feature, an account must belong to or represent a government official, a person running for public office, or a person who’s considered a successor to a current government position. The account must also be verified and have at least 100,000 followers.

Whether or not a tweet gets the notice applied will be up to a collective of Twitter staffers from its trust and safety, legal, public policy, and regional teams, the platform said.

It also said that in some instances, if a Tweet from a verified, 100,000-followed government official violates policies and is determined not to be of public interest, the official will be asked to remove it. Officials who generally qualify as “of public interest,” and who will have this new feature applied to their accounts, do not appear to be in danger of having their accounts deleted regardless of violations.

For now, at least. Twitter did add that, “Over time, public interest and how it’s defined on Twitter may change as we observe different types of behavior.”

Share
Published by
James Hale
Tags: Twitter

Recent Posts

The first ‘Minecraft’ affiliate marketing program will add new dimensions to the sandbox game’s economy

If everything goes according to plan, Minecraft players are about to make more money than…

10 hours ago

Top 5 Branded Videos of the Week: A cashier for your thoughts?

'Tis the season for festive holiday beverages, and some of YouTube's biggest channels are raising…

1 day ago

It’s time to Dual Stream: Twitch unites vertical and horizontal formats at TwitchCon Europe

The 2026 edition of TwitchCon Europe took place in Rotterdam during the last two days…

1 day ago

‘The Backrooms’ and ‘Obsession’ are box office smashes. What’s next for creators in Hollywood?

It's official: Backrooms is a box office sensation, and a new era of creator filmmaking…

2 days ago

Killer Dinner took the Try Guys into a new era–one where they’re producing “the best shows we’ve ever made”

"Not to be too on the nose, but we like trying new things." That's Zach…

2 days ago

KSI’s 13-year run as a member of the Sidemen has come to an end

YouTube's most famous creator septet is becoming a sextet. In a video uploaded on May…

2 days ago