Twitter Updates Security Policy to Combat Spam Tweets and ‘Copypasta’ – CNET [CNET]
According to a May 10 statement from the Twitter Help Desk, such copycat tweets can look like “a block of text, image or a combination of content.”
They can be “repetitive, spammy, and disruptive to people’s experience on Twitter,” the company said, adding that they can be used to artificially amplify content, suppress information or manipulate trending topics and top search results.
Duplicative tweets will still remain visible to people who follow the original user.
We’ve been continuously working to combat spammy &
duplicative content on Twitter at scale and our new Copypasta and Duplicate Content policy clarifies what constitutes a violation along with what happens when it is violated. https://t.co/qA7uhMlgRD https://t.co/W9IyKRXFcQ— Twitter Safety (@TwitterSafety) May 10, 2022
Examples of copypasta include identical or near-identical content tweeted by a single or multiple accounts, or copy-and-pasted tweets that use the same hashtags or tag numerous users “in concert with other accounts,” according to the notification.
Tweets of existing tweets or copy-and-pasting of content combined with unique commentary aren’t considered copypasta, Twitter said.
An individual duplicative tweet wouldn’t result in suspension or expulsion from Twitter, the company said. But using bots to post duplicative content, operating accounts that do nothing but spew copypasta and repetitive copypasta tweets, especially of content that violates other Twitter policies, could result in deplatforming.
Users can report potential violations by clicking on the “report tweet” button and labeling the post as “suspicious or spam,” providing additional details on how the tweet is spreading spam.
Those who think they’ve been wrongly penalized can report the situation to Twitter for an appeal.