What Elon Musk is doing to Twitter, a virtual public space, by introducing mass layoffs and overhauling its operations are a reminder that so-called public spaces have never been as public as advertised and haven’t been designed to be.
So-called public spaces are often hostile toward women and marginalized people
A growing body of research reveals that so-called public spaces, be they physical or virtual, are most often designed by and for the dominant classes and are often hostile toward women and marginalized people. What little efforts Twitter had made to address those problems, Musk is undoing in one fell swoop. He’s eliminating the platform’s safety measures and encouraging increased hostility among its users.
On her show Friday, MSNBC Host Alex Wagner explained that Musk fired the curation team (tasked in part with fighting disinformation), the human rights team (which helped offer protections to journalists and human rights advocates), the ethical artificial intelligence team (which fought algorithmic bias) and half the security team (which protected user privacy). The loss of those people on the security team could make human rights advocates even more vulnerable. Twitter has seen a huge rise in misinformation and hate speech against minorities since Musk’s takeover, which proves the point that, when left unregulated, public spaces privilege the dominant classes.
Evaluating public spaces — their history, use and design — is a useful framework as we think about Twitter and the broader internet, which are also ostensibly for the public en masse, but are not equally safe, accessible or beneficial to everyone.
Think of those town squares from New York to New Orleans that were used for selling enslaved people. Recall the seemingly endless list of Black people who have been killed — by the state — in public spaces for simply existing in them.
Such public spaces are not often designed to be easily accessible for people with disabilities or people pushing strollers, most of whom are women. As an article in The Conversation on gender bias in urban planning explains, even those public spaces for entertainment and recreation are often designed so with men in mind and are unsafe for women: “Entertainment districts are supposed to promote a sophisticated, cosmopolitan urban culture. In reality, many are beer-based male hangouts. Behaviors such as binge drinking, fighting, street vomiting and urination, and sexual harassment exclude women or make them feel uncomfortable.”
Even worse are the so-called public spaces that are privately owned, such as parks and plazas in and around residential or commercial buildings.. As Sarah Schindler, a law professor at University of Denver, explains in her paper “The ‘Publicization’ of Private Space,” privately owned public open spaces “regularly fail to achieve the goals of ‘good’ public space, in part because they are often exclusionary; they only feel welcoming to certain people, and they only permit a limited number and type of activities,” Musk’s purchase of the site has made Twitter even more of a virtual equivalent of a privately owned public open spaces or POPOS. Twitter was never owned by the state, of course, but now the company is now private and is no longer publicly traded.
In 2018, Amnesty International released a report of gender-based violence on Twitter that lamented pervasive rape threats and concluded the site was so hostile toward women that it regularly violated their human rights.
These environments — whether they are publicly or privately owned — are so hostile to or unsupportive of women and marginalized people because they are designed predominantly by white men who have drastically different lived experiences and priorities.









