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Topic: Twitter abuse - '50% of misogynistic tweets from women' (Read 435 times)

legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1217
And how many of these tweets are against whites, heterosexuals, and religious people? When someone refers to "misogynistic tweets", he must first define that term. The definition can very from individual to individual. For example, Sucker Burg believes that posts promoting hatred against whites does not qualify as "hate speech".
hero member
Activity: 938
Merit: 501
Sadly, I see this everyday in my personal feed on Twitter. The safety mechanism on twitter clearly does not work. Small wonder that their user base has stopped growing for the last year.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice
I don't think we're allowed to admit that a humongous amount of the pressure on Modern Woman comes from fellow Modern Woman. I don't think I've ever heard a male criticise a female for not having a thigh gap.

I hate fat woman with small tits.

Female here

 Kiss

Of course it is a joke - btw. how do people verify that the accounts in question are female(or male or maybe just a bot)?

Do not bring rational discussion into this thread,its a study and you need to take it for face value like I did! Tongue

Would be a twisted puppy making women feel funny about their bodies as a past time. Its a good question because they took in quite a lot of tweets there in that one study to say 4/5 where women.
Oh hold on wtf! The study was done by Dove soap! Cheesy They had some stupid ads on about empowering women around that time and showing women with issues and saying be proud of your body.
Good eye..Garbage study!
legendary
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
I don't think we're allowed to admit that a humongous amount of the pressure on Modern Woman comes from fellow Modern Woman. I don't think I've ever heard a male criticise a female for not having a thigh gap.

I hate fat woman with small tits.

Female here

 Kiss

Of course it is a joke - btw. how do people verify that the accounts in question are female(or male or maybe just a bot)?
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
I don't think we're allowed to admit that a humongous amount of the pressure on Modern Woman comes from fellow Modern Woman. I don't think I've ever heard a male criticise a female for not having a thigh gap.
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
the problem is with the younger generation and feminists and all of them thinking and feeling entitled ... to almost anything.

and to sum up your post with a pic

member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice
Half of all misogynistic tweets posted on Twitter come from women, a study suggests.
Quote
Over a three-week period, think tank Demos counted the number of uses of two particular words as indicators of misogyny.

It found evidence of large-scale misogyny, with 6,500 unique users targeted by 10,000 abusive tweets in the UK alone.

Twitter boss Jack Dorsey has said that tackling abuse is a priority.

The research comes as UK MPs - Yvette Cooper, Maria Miller, Stella Creasy, Jess Philips - alongside former Liberal Democrat minister Jo Swinson, launch their Reclaim the Internet campaign, in response to growing public concern about the impact of hate speech and abuse on social media.
The campaign has opened an online forum to discuss ways to make the internet less aggressive, sexist, racist and homophobic.

Launching the campaign, Ms Cooper told the BBC: "The truth is nobody knows what the best answers are. There is more when there is criminal abuse, for example rape threats, that the police should be doing but what is the responsibility of everyone else? What more should social media platforms be doing?"

She said that the campaign was an opportunity for the public to "put forward their proposals and demands for the changes we want to see".

In response to the survey, Twitter's head of trust and safety Kira O'Connor told the BBC: "Hateful conduct has no place on the Twitter platform and is a violation of our terms of service.

"In addition to our policies and user controls, such as block, mute and our new multiple tweet reporting functionality, we work with civil society leaders and academic experts to understand the challenge that exists."

The Demos study also looked at international tweets and found more than 200,000 aggressive tweets using the words, "slut" and "whore", were sent to 80,000 people over the same three weeks.

The commonsense approach to posting comments on social networks would be to never say anything online that you wouldn't say to someone's face but that simple rule seems to be regularly ignored.

Being able to post anonymously helps and, in many ways, social networks have become the modern day equivalent of a natter over the garden fence or a gathering on the village green - but on a global scale.

And just as in the old gossip circles of old, there will be people whose comments are meaner or more aggressive than the rest, so that is amplified online. And now the voices of the trolls can be heard and they can pick victims - generally people they don't know - pretty much at random.

Abuse on social networks is not new and neither is the revelation that women contribute to the problem.

A 2014 study from cosmetics firm Dove found that over five million negative tweets were posted about beauty and body image. Four out of five were sent by women.

The bigger question is what can be done about it?

We have seen in recent years the police take the issue much more seriously and trolls have faced lengthy prison sentences. Some have made public apologies to their victims.

Education will be key. Teaching youngsters who haven't yet joined social media platforms that politeness is not a dying art and that if you say hurtful things online, they could genuinely cause distress, may give the next generation pause for thought before they start typing.
Stark reminder

Demos used algorithms to distinguish between tweets being used in explicitly aggressive ways and those that were more conversational in tone.

Researcher Alex Krasodomski-Jones said: "This study provides a birds-eye snapshot of what is ultimately a very personal and often traumatic experience for women.

"While we have focused on Twitter, who are considerably more generous in sharing their data with researchers like us, it's important to note that misogyny is prevalent across all social media, and we must make sure that the other big tech companies are also involved in discussions around education and developing solutions."

She added that it was not about "policing the internet" but was more "a stark reminder that we are frequently not as good citizens online as we are offline".

Thousands have responded to the hashtag #ReclaimtheInternet, with many congratulating the female MPs for starting the campaign.

Others though questioned how effective the campaign would be, with some questioning whether it would damage free speech.

Equality speaks up as we can see here the Women are not as wholesome as they would like us to believe. Cool
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