Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Twitter boots nonprofit that exposed politicians’ deleted tweets

Add as a preferred source on Google

Transparency is a great thing, especially when it concerns politicians of all ideologues, who in general don’t have a reputation for consistent integrity. But Twitter users who appreciate some NGO oversight with their daily dose of political tweets are in for a disappointment because Politwoops has just been booted off Twitter.

If you haven’t heard of Politwoops (note the pun spelling), it’s run by a nonprofit called the Sunlight Foundation, based in Washington, D.C. Its mission is promoting transparency in governments around the world. The nonprofit has traditionally taken to Twitter to post the deleted tweets of politicians of all stripes and parties – until now, that is.

Recommended Videos

Twitter recently kicked the nonprofit off its site and shut down its stream because posting deleted tweets of anyone is apparently a violation of Twitter’s developer’s agreement. The concerns from Twitter’s standpoint relate to privacy. Users of the site – unscrupulous politicians included – have a right to privacy, and that included not wanting deleted tweets to be preserved by a government watchdog.

From the viewpoint of government-transparency advocates, this is a blow to the right of the public to know about their politicians and, ultimately, holding them accountable. Sure, people can still access the Sunlight Foundation’s website, but shutting down its Twitter stream destroys one popular channel for getting the news out.

While the American Politwoops stream (as well as other countries) on Twitter is no more, the British version on Twitter still exists under the handle Tweets MPs Delete (image above). Unsurprisingly, the fate of this stream, which tracks British politicians, is in jeopardy right now for the same privacy-concern reasons outlined above.

Politwoops is a valuable service because it keeps public what elected representatives serving on the public’s behalf don’t want the public to see or remember. To be sure, not all tweets are questionable in nature. A quick review of Politwoops’ old U.S. Twitter stream on the Sunlight Foundation’s website, whose last deleted tweet belonged to Democratic House Representative Tammy Duckworth, found a combination of inappropriate and benign tweets.

Though Twitter has a priority to protect its users’ privacy, the public may be the big loser with the shutdown of a transparency service like this.

Marc Schenker
Marc Schenker is a copywriter who's an expert in business and marketing topics like e-commerce, B2Bs, digital marketing and…
Reddit is ending anonymous browsing on old Reddit, and longtime users are not happy
Reddit's old interface is getting a login requirement, and its long term future looks uncertain.
Reddit

If you have been quietly browsing old.reddit.com without logging in, that option is going away. Reddit just announced it will require everyone to log in to use old.reddit.com, with the change landing sometime over the next month. A Reddit admin broke the news on the platform, calling it part of a push to tighten how automated systems get into the site.

Why is Reddit locking down the old interface?

Read more
TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and YouTube are failing kids with broken safety features, research finds
Over half of social media child safety features don't work as advertised.
a boy using iPhone

Social media platforms have spent years telling parents their children are safe online. New research suggests those assurances don't hold up. A report from the Cybersafety Research Center tested 86 child safety features across TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and YouTube. Only 35 worked as promised, and the rest were broken, buried in settings, or missing entirely.

Which social media platforms performed the worst on child safety?

Read more
Yet another research proves TikTok injury advice is just downright bad
Your knee should not be taking rehab instructions from viral TikToks
TikTok

We've already heard a lot about the negative impact of social media, like how it keeps kids hooked to screens. But one of its emerging problems is the terrible medical advice being shared on the platform. The platform is often used for new learning dance routines or a new recipe, but it's also being used to share health-related advice from non-professionals.

A new study led by researchers at Université de Montréal has assessed TikTok videos about anterior cruciate ligament rehabilitation exercises, and the result is not exactly reassuring. The team looked at 106 videos found through the search term “ACL rehab exercises,” including 55 posted by ordinary users and 51 posted by health care professionals.

Read more