Social media giant Twitter has broken its silence on the racist abuse aimed and England players at Euro 2020.
The company say the United Kingdom was “by far” the main origin of racist posts aimed at England players after the Euro 2020 final.
Gareth Southgate’s Three Lions lost out in the final to Italy via a penalty shootout after Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka failing to convert their spot-kicks.
In the aftermath of the heart-breaking defeat, the young trio were subjected to vile online abuse ith police last week confirming they had so far made 11 arrests during their investigation of online racial abuse of England players.
Twitter has now shared an insight into their analysis of “the abhorrent racist abuse” directed at players on the platform around last month’s final.
UK ‘by far’ main origin of racist posts after Euro 2020 final
Today, We want to share an overview of our analysis of the abhorrent racist abuse directed at England players during the Euro 2020 Final last month, and an update of the ongoing steps we’ve put in place since February to protect the public conversation in the UK.
— Twitter UK (@TwitterUK) August 10, 2021
Twitter UK posted: “On the night of the Euros final, our automated tools kicked in immediately, and ensured we identified and removed 1,622 abusive Tweets in the 24 hours that followed.
“Only two per cent of the tweets we removed generated more than 1,000 impressions.
“While many have quite rightly highlighted the global nature of the conversation, it is also important to acknowledge the UK was – by far – the largest country of origin for the abusive tweets we removed.
“Our data suggests that ID verification would have been unlikely to prevent the abuse from happening – as of the permanently suspended accounts, 99 per cent of account owners were identifiable.
“Since our update in February, we’ve improved our proactive tools to identify racist abuse and removed just under 13,000 tweets – of which 95 per cent were identified proactively.
“Soon, we will be testing a new product feature that temporarily autoblocks accounts using harmful language.
“There is no place for racist abuse on Twitter.
“Our aim is always that Twitter be used as a vehicle for every person to communicate safely.
“We’re determined to do all we can, along with our partners, to stop these abhorrent views and behaviours being seen on and off the platform.”
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