Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo sought to calm global outrage over the company’s new -country-by-country censorship policy, complaining in part that the issue is being treated with the same kind of shorthand that has made Twitter popular.
Speaking at the All Things D conference on Monday, Costolo repeated the company’s justification for the policy change it announced last week: By taking down tweets only in the country where Twitter believes they may have violated local laws, it is making sure the maximum 140-character-long messages are still available to the rest of the world.
Twitter’s reasoning has been mostly lost in a barrage of comments — many from Twitter users themselves — that the company is caving in to attacks on free speech, especially in countries with repressive regimes.
“It’s a super complex issue,” Costolo said. “When the news came out, people tried to distill it down to: ‘What did they just say?’ It’s easy to distill it down to: ‘Twitter is endorsing XYZ.’”
“It takes a while for the scholars and the people who study these matters to weigh in and start to say: ‘Wait, this is actually a thoughtful and honest approach to doing this and it’s in fact being done in a way that’s forward--looking.’ So we wait for that to happen,” he added.
The complaint about knee-jerk responses to complex issues is somewhat ironic, given that the company’s meteoric growth has been fueled often by buzz-worthy, but flippant comments.
Costolo also said that if Twitter reacts to take-down requests, it will make public the reasons a tweet is being removed. The company already has 45 people who respond to such requests, including those from copyright holders of music or movies in the US.
He said the policy would not affect its stance toward China or Iran, where the service is already blocked completely.
“I don’t think the current environment in China is one in which we think we could operate,” he said.
Costolo spoke just days before Facebook is expected to file the paperwork necessary for an initial public offering of stock, a move that is likely to make initial investors and employees in the company rich. San Francisco-based Twitter also faces the same securities regulations that are forcing Facebook to go public.
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