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[return to "The Twitter Files, Part Six"]
1. angelb+S61[view] [source] 2022-12-17 05:07:21
>>GavCo+(OP)
The wildest part of the Twitter files is the unhinged framing that they are presented under.

1. Anyone who has been in a tech company knows that there is internal lingo that refers to features we devs make. But it's presented as being an "Orwellian language"

2. Based on the emails he posts, the agencies give links to review based on tips they receive or their own intel and twitter then decides if it violates ToS or not (and they sometimes did not act or simply temporarily suspended). But it's presented as a "deep state"-like collusion where the agencies control if twitter act on them or not.

3. The people in the company discuss internal matters and are sometimes critical of potential decisions. But they are presented mostly stripped of context and the focus is on anonymized employees snarky comments to make it seem like decisions were arbitrary, partisan, and without any regard to logic or context.

I could go for hours listing these.

Most quote tweets are people thinking this confirms a suspected malicious intent from twitter and that they intentionally dramatically shifted the outcomes while colluding with one side.

If anything, this confirms that Twitter acted (outside of a couple isolated occurences) in a way tamer way than I ever imagined them acting while handling the issues at hand.

EDIT: Formatting

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2. rayine+bb1[view] [source] 2022-12-17 05:48:42
>>angelb+S61
I’ve never been a big fan of Taibbi. But all the things you’re mentioning are characteristic of his journalistic style, which made him famous in his coverage of Wall Street back in 2008. It’s uncharitable and filtered through a fundamental distrust of moneyed corporations, but I’ve never heard it described as “unhinged.”

And I’m not sure “unhinged” is an appropriate description. For example, while “internal lingo” may be common, isn’t it also fair to observe that much corporate internal lingo is pretty Orwellian? Similarly, as to your second point, is it unreasonable to draw an inference that Twitter is doing what some agency wants it to do, when the agency asks Twitter to do something and then Twitter does it?

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3. emoden+3i1[view] [source] 2022-12-17 07:19:57
>>rayine+bb1
The argument seems to be that what the FBI is doing is more or less analogous to you clicking the report button, which hardly makes you a shadowy figure controlling Twitter if they act on your report.
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4. naaski+oM1[view] [source] 2022-12-17 13:17:14
>>emoden+3i1
> The argument seems to be that what the FBI is doing is more or less analogous to you clicking the report button

Weekly meetings between the FBI and top Twitter executives is "akin to clicking the report button"? Name one other Twitter user that had this privilege. I think that's a pretty strong sign that you're trying to stretch this analogy too far.

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5. TOMDM+KO1[view] [source] 2022-12-17 13:40:55
>>naaski+oM1
Where are you getting weekly meetings from?

This set of tweets details 150 emails total over a period of over two and a half years (jan 2020 to nov 2022).

It even specifically quotes their mention of their quarterly meeting.

My biggest problem with people who think the Twitter files are A Big Deal, is their seeming inability to accurately describe the contents.

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6. naaski+cP1[view] [source] 2022-12-17 13:44:35
>>TOMDM+KO1
> My biggest problem with people who think the Twitter files are A Big Deal, is their seeming inability to accurately describe the contents.

Or maybe you're just ignorant of the contents:

https://news.yahoo.com/twitter-executive-met-fbi-weekly-0150...

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