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Was the report made by a potential target of abuse or a bystander?

Posted: Tue Feb 11, 2025 10:39 am
by Rina7RS
Some tweets may appear insulting in isolation, but may not appear so in the context of a fuller conversation or the historical relationships between people on the platform. For example, innocent banter between friends may be offensive to an outside observer, and certain statements that are acceptable in one culture or country may not be acceptable in another. To help our team avoid mistakes and unconsensual interactions, in some cases we ask the actual target or their authorized representative to report before actual action is taken .


Has the user ever violated our policies?

We start with the assumption that people won't intentionally albania telegram data break our rules. Severe violations require us to immediately suspend an account. Beyond that, we first educate people about our rules and give them a chance to correct their behavior. We show the offending Tweet to the offender, explain the rule they violated, and ask them to remove it before they can Tweet again. If someone breaks our rules multiple times, we take stronger enforcement actions. This includes requiring the violator to remove the Tweet, and taking other actions like verifying account ownership andor temporarily restricting them from Tweeting for a period of time. If someone continues to violate the rules on this basis, their account may be permanently suspended.