Twitter Birdwatch Feature Rolls Out To More Users, Allowing Posters To Moderate Content Themselves
A Twitter content moderation feature called Birdwatch appears to be rolling out to larger audiences this week, with many users reporting “Birdwatch notes” in their feeds for the first time.
Great work from Birdwatch. Very useful context. pic.twitter.com/ddF5D0QtJV
— Paul Katsen (@pavtalk) September 29, 2022
Birdwatch works by allowing accredited users to point out false or misleading information in a tweet and then attach their notes in a little window at the bottom of a tweet. A note only appears after enough fellow Birdwatchers agree that the note is a good note.
To begin using the feature and become a Birdwatcher, you have to first work as a voter evaluating Birdwatching notes written by others, but after you do enough of that, you can then write your own. Birdwatchers post anonymously, and choose a nickname:
This is the first time I’ve seen a Birdwatch note surfaced in the timeline and I think this is great. Twitter needs more of this! pic.twitter.com/0MPKX2yMi8
— Steven Peterson 🏳️🌈 (@squeakytoy) September 30, 2022
Technically, Birdwatch began in 2020 — but in recent days, it’s received more attention. A September 7th blog post by Twitter promised a wider roll-out, and it seems as if that could be happening now.
How many of y'all are seeing 'Birdwatch' stuff?
Curious about how 'limited' it is. 😆 pic.twitter.com/PDeI7roBHw— 🅺🅸🅽🅴🆃🅸🅲 (@Kirloulou) September 27, 2022
Birdwatch appears aimed to address what has been a longtime problem on Twitter — the circulation of false and misleading information. Countries at war, companies trying to make a profit and trolls seeking to sow chaos routinely use the platform to joke and lie.
Information moves rapidly on Twitter, and so often it’s hard for people to know what is true and what is not. Recent hoaxes like the China Coup hoax show that a small network of determined posters can make a story trend before traditional gatekeepers like journalists are able to fact-check and verify it.
🙄 someone birdwatched this so I rated it 😏 pic.twitter.com/vMWFe7EtGt
— Freedom Recon (@FreedomRecon) September 28, 2022
But Twitter’s new feature isn’t just about combating feral posters though. Tweets by politicians and publications like the Washington Post can also be Birdwatched, and Birdwatchers can criticize an imprecise or misleading use of language in a headline. They can also criticize a faulty citation to a statistical study.
This Twitter problem also manifests in the user experience, which is often defined by people dissing and debating each other with little regard for what the facts may be.
Hi welcome to twitter, where we'll take everything you say out of context and in bad faith :)
— Hayley but spooky 🏴☠️🏳️🌈SMAU📌🔞 (@heyhayley) October 2, 2022
So far, many posters seemed excited about the new feature, largely thrilled to see Twitter doing something to combat misinformation.
Holy shit I guess twitter is finally adding in the ability for people to give context to misleading or incorrect tweets?
It's called Birdwatch, and it'll put a note below a given tweet with contextual information for other people to view.
Thank fuck. About damn time.— Michael Paulauski (@mike10010100) October 1, 2022
Twitter has introduced a new fact checking feature & named it BIRDWATCH 😂, I love it pic.twitter.com/YJnXFPLe7O
— Virgil Hawkins (@CrymsonDawn) September 30, 2022
On the flip side, however, few seemed to object to the feature, seeming to view it as a form of social control.
LOL, you can only do this Birdwatch thing if Twitter hasn't ever convicted you of tweetcrime.
OFC. They're just faux-crowdsourcing the exact same shit.— V-X (@V_Xworks) October 3, 2022
Certain posters reveled in the new power that being a Birdwatcher could bring them, while others shared the moral and methodological dilemmas of being a Birdwatcher, wondering how to determine what is true, what is ethical and what should be in the public forum.
I am now authorized to write "birdwatch notes" so watch your step, mfs.
— Evelyn 🤑 (@EvelynLouise8) October 1, 2022
Just got the birdwatch feature and I'm at a loss for how to rate this note. It's obviously just a pro-Biden gotcha, but it would help my boy Brandon to vote yes… pic.twitter.com/24vKLM9erw
— Ali (@haramcart) October 2, 2022
birdwatch is something else pic.twitter.com/hbuk6Zd2Es
— The People's Commissar for Orgasmic Affairs (@faggopnitsa) October 3, 2022
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