Twitter temporarily blocks Donald Trump's campaign account for spreading coronavirus 'misinformation'

Twitter has hidden a tweet from Donald Trump where he said children were "almost immune" to COVID-19, and briefly banned his campaign account.

US President Donald Trump

US President Donald Trump Source: AAP

Twitter on Wednesday said it had temporarily blocked US President Donald Trump's official campaign account from tweeting due to a post containing misinformation about COVID-19.

At issue in the post by the @TeamTrump account was a claim by the US president that children are "almost immune" to the novel coronavirus.

The tweet "is in violation of the Twitter rules on COVID-19 misinformation," a spokesperson for the San Francisco-based service told AFP.
"The account owner will be required to remove the Tweet before they can Tweet again."

A video of Mr Trump making the claim during a Fox News interview was earlier removed from Facebook in the first action aimed at the president's page by the leading social network.

The move came as Facebook faces pressure to prevent the spread of misinformation while simultaneously being accused of silencing viewpoints by calling for posts to be truthful.
US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House.
US President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House. Source: AAP
The @TeamTrump account was posting again shortly after Twitter's announcement, and the contested video clip appeared to have been removed.

"Silicon Valley is hopelessly biased against the president and only enforces the rules in one direction," the campaign's director of communications Tim Murtaugh wrote, in a reaction to the temporary ban that was retweeted by @TeamTrump.

Mr Trump defended his comments when questioned about them during a White House press briefing.

"I'm talking about (being immune) from getting very sick," Mr Trump said.

"If you look at children, I mean, they are able to throw it off very easily."

Health officials have urged people of all age groups to protect themselves against exposure to the virus, saying everyone is at risk.

Mr Trump last week unleashed a burst of misleading medical speculation, criticism for his own top virus expert and praise for an eccentric preacher-doctor touting conspiracy theories.

 


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2 min read
Published 6 August 2020 10:00am
Updated 6 August 2020 2:14pm
Source: AFP, SBS



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