A French court ruled Thursday that Twitter, which has steadfastly
refused calls to police its millions of users, must hand over data to
help identify the authors of racist or anti-Semitic tweets.
The ruling
follows a legal complaint lodged in October by France's Union of Jewish
Students (UEJF) which argued that numerous tweets had breached French
law prohibiting incitement to racial hatred.
The union had been
pressing Twitter to exercise tighter control of what appeared on its
site following a deluge of anti-Semitic messages posted under the
hashtag #unbonjuif (#agoodjew).
Twitter later removed some of the offending tweets.
The UEJF took legal action aimed at forcing Twitter to identify the authors of some of the posts.
The court in Paris on Thursday said the site must do this "within the framework of its French site".
In
October, Twitter suspended the account of a neo-Nazi group in Germany
following a request from the government in Berlin. It was the first time
the US firm had acted on a request of that nature from a government.
- Blogger Comment
- Facebook Comment
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
0 comments:
Post a Comment