Twitter recently announced changes in its safety policies in the United Kingdom following a multitude of violent tweets aimed at a member of the British Parliament. Twitter users in the United States are also not immune to threatening tweets. msnbc contributor Goldie Taylor described her experience with Twitter after she received death threats over the social media site.
First amendment rights, Taylor explains, “don’t protect violent threats; they don’t give you safe harbor for threatening to kill someone, threatening to rape someone…certainly not on a private company’s platform.”
“Twitter is not a bullhorn on the sidewalk.”
The threats were not from a typical troll that could simply be blocked. In fact, they were particularly ominous. As Taylor explained on Weekends with Alex Witt, one Twitter user posted “what he believed was my office address. He then posted later that he would send two after me. Two were on the way, which is a double-tap to the forehead.”








