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UK police reduce X presence amid extremist content worries

Many users, including police, are said to have left the platform ‘in response to the volume of hate speech, disinformation, and Elon Musk’s use of it’

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A masked protester throws a can of beer towards riot police in Bristol, southern England, on August 3. British police tackled a wave of far-right protests and other demonstrations, fuelled by online content, much of it false. Photo: AFP
Reuters

As Elon Musk’s X battles to keep users in key markets, several British police forces are scaling back their presence on the global social media platform and one has abandoned it, reflecting concern about its role in promoting extremist views.

X, formerly Twitter, was used to spread disinformation this summer that sparked riots across Britain, and has reinstated British-based accounts that had been banned for extremist content.

Critics say Musk’s hands-off approach has allowed lies and hate speech to spread.

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Reuters contacted all 45 territorial police forces and British Transport Police by email.

Of the 33 to give details about their policy, 10 forces who collectively police nearly 13 million people said they were actively reviewing their presence on X, while 13 said they frequently reviewed all their social media platforms.

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X has been a key communications channel for the British government, public services and even the royal family for more than 10 years. For emergency services, its succinct format and wide reach are effective in alerting users to everything from civil emergencies to missing people or road closures.

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