Published 14:45 IST, January 17th 2021

Donald Trump's social media ban lead to drop in online misinformation, claim reports

As per reports, online misinformation on election fraud has gone down by 73% after the United States President Donald Trump's suspension from social media sites

Reported by: Swagata Banerjee
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Online misinformation about election fraud has reportedly gone down by 73 percent after United States President Donald Trump's suspension from various social media platforms, as per research firm Zignal Labs, a San Fransisco based media intelligence software service company. 

READ | Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey Reasons Ban On Donald Trump; States US President Had Been Warned

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firm has found that conversations about election fraud dropped from 2.5 million mentions to 688,000 mentions across several social media sites within a week of Trump's suspension from Twitter on January 8. It also found that use of hashtags related to US Capitol siege dropped immensely whereas mentions of hashtag #FightforTrump, which was widely used across social media services like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter dropped by 95%, as per  Washington Post reports. 

READ | Trump Uses POTUS Twitter To Issue First Statement On Ban, Microblogging Site Deletes Tweet

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Twitter permanently suspends President Trump

On January 8, Twitter had permanently suspended outgoing US President Donald Trump’s account over repeated violations of its rules, including incitement of violence. company said that after assessing tweets in context of a violent storming of Capitol, it determined that Trump’s tweets violated firm’s ‘Glorification of Violence’ policy and constituted immediate removal from platform.  President had said that millions of those who voted for him would have a “giant voice long into future and y will t be disrespected or treated unfairly in any way. In following tweet, Trump said, “To all of those who have asked, I will t be going to inauguration on January 20th”. 

READ | Trump Allowed On Twitter With 'final Warning' After 12hr Of Clampdown Post Capitol Siege

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Meanwhile, President Donald Trump became first President in history of United States to be impeached by House for second time as he has been charged with “incitement of insurrection” over mob siege of Capitol. However, Trump took responsibility for attack but said he wanted " violence". He also defended his earlier remarks to a pro-Trump protesting crowd at a rally last week by calling it "totally appropriate". Trump took responsibility for attack but said he wanted " violence". He had added, "To continue on this path, I think it’s causing tremendous danger to our country, and it’s causing tremendous anger."

READ | Twitter Explains Transfer Of White House Accounts As Biden's Inauguration Day Closes In

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14:45 IST, January 17th 2021