Pattern Matching

Twitter and Facebook Experiment With Offloading Content Moderation

Birdwatch and the Oversight Board are new approaches to the same idea: shifting responsibility away from the platforms themselves

Will Oremus
OneZero
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7 min readJan 30, 2021

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Twitter headquarters in San Francisco. Photo: Scott Strazzante/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

In the never-ending scramble to solve the insoluble problem of content moderation, social media companies are willing to try just about anything — as long as it doesn’t involve making it a core part of their business.

Contrasting approaches were on display this week from Facebook and Twitter. Facebook’s Oversight Board, a semi-independent body that it created as a sort of appeals court for content moderation decisions, ruled on its first slate of five cases. While Facebook was turning to its elite panel of well-known figures from around the world, Twitter announced a project called Birdwatch that enlists ordinary users to flag, label, and annotate misleading tweets.

One is punting moderation to its own private international court of justice; the other is hoping to crowdsource it to a cadre of volunteers. Does either model hold promise for making online content moderation more consistent, credible, and effective?

The Pattern

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Will Oremus
Will Oremus

Written by Will Oremus

Senior Writer, OneZero, at Medium