Twitter suspends account after harasment

Published Jan 9, 2017

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Los Angeles - Twitter

suspended the account of Martin Shkreli after the brash former pharmaceutical

executive harassed a female reporter online, the latest high-profile case of

abuse on the social media service.

Over the past few days,

freelance reporter Lauren Duca posted about several unwanted digital advances

by Shkreli, the former chief executive officer of Turing Pharmaceuticals,

including a message in which Shkreli invited her to the inauguration of President-elect

Donald Trump. Unbowed, Shkreli proceeded to post about Duca publicly, prompting

her to ask Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey to intervene on Sunday.

“The Twitter Rules prohibit

targeted harassment, and we will take action on accounts violating those policies,”

a Twitter spokesman said in a statement Sunday. The rules allow Shkreli to

appeal his suspension, but he would have to make changes to his account before

being reinstated. Shkreli declined to comment via e-mail.

Shkreli targeted Duca after

she wrote that Trump was undermining civil rights and manipulating Americans in

an essay for Teen Vogue. The piece landed her on a few cable TV news

programs. Shkreli endorsed Trump last March, and released snippets of an

unreleased Wu-Tang Clan album to celebrate Trump’s victory in November.

Twitter has struggled to

curb harassment on its service for years. Though the service enabled

millions of people living under repressive regimes to report abuse and

organize, it has also empowered some users to hurl repugnant tweets at others.

Read also:  Twitter seeks new path

Leslie Jones, a cast member

of “Saturday Night Live,” briefly quit Twitter because she grew weary of the

abuse, and only rejoined after Dorsey intervened. Twitter banned Milo

Yiannopoulos, an editor at Breitbart News who led the campaign against Jones.

Morphed

Over the years, harassment

on Twitter has morphed from a distraction into a full-fledged business problem.

Walt Disney is said to have ended its pursuit of the social media company at

least in part because the home of Mickey Mouse feared the abuse would tarnish

its kid-friendly image. Late last year, Twitter introduced new tools to help

users protect themselves, and it suspended some accounts of prominent white

supremacists.

Read also:  Cyberbullying: Twitter expands its 'mute' option

Shkreli, a prolific tweeter,

is no stranger to controversy. He rose to fame when Turing raised prices for a

drug called Daraprim by more than 50-fold. That made him a poster boy for price

gouging in the pharmaceutical industry, and got him included in a recent US

Senate committee report that called on the government to increase competition

to lower prices.

Shkreli later paid millions

of dollars for a copy of a Wu-Yang Clan album, and has since been charged with

defrauding investors. He pleaded not guilty.

 BLOOMBERG

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