Twitter announced on Hostess in HeatFriday that it had suspended thousands of state-sponsored accounts with ties to Middle East governments, including one belonging to a former Saudi Arabian official who's been implicated in the 2018 murder of Washington Postjournalist Jamal Khashoggi.
The company announced the suspensions in a Twitter Safety blog post on Friday. In the post, the company said it had suspended the account of Saud al-Qahtani, a former aide to Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed. Implicated in Khashoggi's death, he was also the target of sanctions enacted by the Trump administration in response to the journalist's killing.
Not much has been heard from Al-Qahatani since his dismissal by Prince Mohammed in Oct. 2018, on Twitter or otherwise, leading to recent speculation he was dead.
Twitter only said the account was suspended for "violations of our platform manipulation policies." The company had no further comment on the situation after a subsequent email from Mashable.
Among the other accounts banned:
271 from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt, for attacking Qatar and Iran
4,248 accounts from the UAE targeting Qatar and Yemen that "were often employing false personae and tweeting about regional issues, such as the Yemeni Civil War and the Houthi Movement"
Six accounts from Saudi Arabia that were spreading pro-Saudi propaganda
259 accounts in Spain tied to the People's Party for "engaging in spamming or retweet behaviour to increase engagement"
1,019 accounts in Ecuador tied to the PAIS Alliance political party for "hashtag manipulation."
In addition to the suspensions, the company published a data set on over 4,000 accounts that had previously been flagged for running state-sponsored propaganda targeting Hong Kong protesters.
Last October, following Khashoggi's initial disappearance, Twitter suspended a slew of accounts that were spamming the platform with pro-government, pro-Prince Mohammed messages. At the same time, the story broke of a pro-government Saudi spy who had actually infiltrated Twitter and worked within the company to aid the Prince Mohammed's regime.
Twitter has made the data sets available to download and peruse here in exchange for an email address.
Topics Social Media X/Twitter Politics
So your state legalized marijuana: 6 things to knowWatch children try to do #MannequinChallenge and adorably failThe internet is looking for a dad and child pictured at NotreJack Dorsey's getting dunked on for his unkempt look at TED 2019This livestream features a 'poly' bald eagle throuple raising a family200 million people will probably be using smart speakers by the end of this yearSamsung Galaxy Fold phones are already breakingHow plastic effects climate changeSamsung Galaxy Fold phones are already breakingSomeone sent Hillary Clinton 1,000 roses after the electionHere are 39 things Donald Trump has promised AmericaReal estate publication skewered after bougie proTwitter is now able to detect harassment without user reportsWhy Daenery's execution of the Tarlys could be her downfallPolitician explains what a Tupac Shakur is to parliamentHere's a small way to support the vulnerable in Trump's AmericaChrome extension replaces pictures of Donald Trump with burgersThis livestream features a 'poly' bald eagle throuple raising a familyYoko Ono issues a completely Yoko Ono statement on Trump victoryiOS 13 will bring a huge dark mode update to iPhone Mindset headphones train listeners to concentrate better Twitter pairs Trump's big speech to Congress with a new top commentary feature Weapons and ammo in 'Horizon: Zero Dawn' are confusing, so here's a guide Saudi Arabia's king is bringing a massive 1,500 Obviously, young Justin Trudeau was hot. Here are the pictures that prove it Chicago breaks surprising 146 The Samsung Galaxy S8 probably looks exactly like this Trump was caught practicing his speech, so the internet made jokes This isn't a Nintendo Switch review, but it'll help you decide whether to buy one Google patented a mysterious camera hat Basically everyone reuses their passwords Man sentenced to 30 days in prison for accidentally hitting woman with his drone Warren Buffett: 'If a lady says no, she means maybe' Uber's Travis Kalanick: Yep, I'm a jerk, basically Metal fetus proves that Rock 'n' Roll isn't dead Facebook ready to ramp up flights of its solar Cinema just can't resist pranking its audience after that Oscars mix Twitter Eggs and trolls are now finally getting the banhammer they deserve Can a podcast actually save America? Three former Obama staffers think so We tested Google's new harassment tool on hateful right
2.2539s , 10113.0546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Hostess in Heat】,Prosperous Times Information Network