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Twitter to remove COVID-19 vaccine conspiracy theories

December 17, 2020
Twitter announced on Wednesday that it will force people to remove tweets that contain false information about COVID-19 vaccines. — Courtesy photo
Twitter announced on Wednesday that it will force people to remove tweets that contain false information about COVID-19 vaccines. — Courtesy photo

BRUSSELS — Twitter announced on Wednesday that it will force people to remove tweets that contain false information about COVID-19 vaccines.

"Starting next week, we will prioritize the removal of the most harmful misleading information, and during the coming weeks begin to label Tweets that contain potentially misleading information about the vaccine," the company said in a blog post.

As such, any tweets with conspiracy theories that claim that immunizations and vaccines are used to intentionally cause harm to or control populations will be removed.

Widely debunked false claims about the adverse impacts or effects of receiving a vaccination and other claims that COVID-19 is not real or not serious and that therefore vaccination is not needed will also be removed.

The social media platform will start enforcing this policy on Dec. 21. In early 2021, it will also label or place a warning on Tweets that "advance unsubstantiated rumors, disputed claims, as well as incomplete or out-of-context information about vaccines."

These warnings will be accompanied by links to authoritative public health information to provide additional context and information about the disease and the pandemic.

So far, only a handful of countries have approved a vaccine.

The United Kingdom, Canada, ad the US have all started vaccinating their populations with the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech. Russia has also launched its own mass vaccination campaign with its Sputnik V campaign.

The European Medicines Agency is to meet later on Dec.21 to decide whether to approve the use of the Pfizer/BioNtech vaccine in the European Union. Several member states, including Germany, have already indicated that they're planning to start their own immunization campaign before the end of the month. — Euronews


December 17, 2020
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