Twitter on Tuesday announced that it is pulling together a council of outside experts and organisations to battle abusive behaviour at the one-to-many messaging service.
"With hundreds of millions of Tweets sent per day, the volume of content on Twitter is massive, which makes it extraordinarily complex to strike the right balance between fighting abuse and speaking truth to power," head of global policy outreach Patricia Cartes said in a blog post.
"It requires a multi-layered approach where each of our 320 million users has a part to play, as do the community of experts working for safety and free expression." More than 40 organisations and experts from 13 regions are joining as inaugural members of Twitter's freshly-created Trust and Safety Council, according to Cartes.
The list of members included The Anti-Defamation League; Center for Democracy and Technology; EU Kids Online, and Feminine Frequency.
"We are taking a global and inclusive approach so that we can hear a diversity of voices," Cartes said.
Twitter announced the new council on Safer Internet Day, and the heightened focus on preventing bullying, harassment and other abuses came as the San Francisco-based company strives to promote use of its platform.
"We are thrilled to work with these organisations to ensure that we are enabling everyone, everywhere to express themselves with confidence on Twitter," Cartes said.
Twitter last week announced that it had suspended more than 125,000 accounts, most of them linked to the Islamic State group, as part of increased efforts to eradicate "terrorist content" on the global messaging platform.
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