Search This Blog

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Clothing brands’ push for gender inclusive clothing hit as ‘marketing ploy,’ ‘confusing to children’

 Fashion labels marketing “genderless,” “gender neutral” or “gender inclusive” clothing is championed by proponents as a groundbreaking movement that challenges the traditional gender stereotypes, but critics of the trendy category argue the industry is marketing off a social contagion, and could be doing irreparable harm, specifically to minors.

Erin Schmidt, a senior analyst at Coresight Research, a global advisory and research firm specializing in retail and technology, said she noticed a shift in the industry about two to three years ago when there was more discussion around gender identity and pronoun usage in the workplace and in schools.

“I believe that really helped to push the [gender neutral] category forward because it was really then that individuals became aware there were different categories such as non-binary, agender and cisgender, and that individuals related differently to how they were born,” she told Fox News Digital.

She said younger consumers have also had a major impact on the prominence of the gender-neutral category.

In 2021, PacSun opened a gender free children’s store in the Mall of America and Gilly Hicks, a division of Abercrombie and Fitch Co., opened its first gender-neutral storefront in Columbus.

Schmidt believes kids and teens are probably “one of the biggest” markets for the genderless clothing category.

Clothing brands like Pacsun have opened stores for gender neutral clothing.
Clothing brands like Pacsun have opened stores for gender neutral clothing.
Photo by Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Pacsun

The “more choices that children have” to express themselves “will definitely have a positive impact over the longer term,” Schmidt said. “It’s definitely more than a pride month” and “it’s definitely not a trend or a movement, it’s the way of the future,” she added. 

Celebrities like Jared Leto and Harry Styles, have pushed gender boundaries in fashion, often appearing on the red carpet in feminine clothing like dresses and skirts.

“Celebrities are actually really helping to push the category forward and just really legitimize it,” Schmidt said. “Especially younger generations, when they see that Brad Pitt wore a skirt to the Bullet Train premiere, that suddenly says, ‘Okay, this is okay. I can wear a skirt too.’”

But, not everyone sees this trend as a good thing. 

Jennifer Sey, author of “Levi’s Unbuttoned” and former Levi’s executive, said the trend could potentially be very confusing to young people, who she said should be encouraged to accept who they are in their bodies.

Actor Jared Leto and other celebrities have recently pushed gender boundaries in fashion.
Actor Jared Leto and other celebrities have recently pushed gender boundaries in fashion.
Photo by Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

“The fact is, there are biological males and there are biological females,” Sey said. “When the message is being promoted by popular brands, by your teacher in school, that those two things do not exist … I think it’s really confusing to kids.”

“It can become very retrograde,” she added. “I was a little girl that was a tomboy and I was an athlete. It didn’t mean that I wasn’t a girl. I thought that was what the feminist movement was all about.

Sey chalked up the movement to a push by corporations and their leaders who are attempting to launder their own reputations as “do-gooders and altruists” instead of about making money.

“I think it is primarily virtue signaling,” Sey said. “I think it is reputation laundering, in a sense. It’s a way to signal that you are on the right side of progressive causes without actually having to do very much.”

She highlighted the fact that the narrow segment of the population is non-binary or trans, which she believes signals it’s not really about them,” but instead “about all the other people that want to claim to support this population.

Only 1.6% of U.S. adults identify as transgender or non-binary, while 5.1% of adults younger than 30 identify as trans or non-binary, according to the Pew Research Center. 

“Positioning the brand around these woke causes is not about selling more, it’s about the shield of progressivism to hide and obscure the fact that business is as it always has been,” she added. 

In November 2020, tampon brand This is L. partnered with the Phluid Project on a campaign that featured trans activist Jeffrey Marsh. 

“Trans men have periods,” Marsh wrote in an Instagram post. “Women and nonbinary people have periods. “*Periods are for people*.”

“It’s ludicrous because a trans woman doesn’t need tampons,” Sey said in response to the ad. “It’s clearly not for that population. It’s for everybody else to understand how virtuous you are as a brand and a business.” 

She said corporations and retailers are co-opting the current social contagion without considering any of the consequences. 

“I think it’s a way to obscure intention because the intention of any company and the fiduciary responsibility is to make money,” she added. “They don’t even realize or recognize that it’s really alienating to probably, I would argue, half of the population, if not more.”

Former Levi's executive Jennifer Sey said the gender neutral clothing could potentially be confusing to children
Former Levi’s executive Jennifer Sey said the gender neutral clothing could potentially be confusing to children.
REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

Some brands like One DNA, Telfar, Tomboy X, Wildfang, Kirrin Finch have made names for themselves as gender-neutral brands, while labels like H&M, Victoria’s Secret brand PINK, Nordstrom, Tommy Hilfiger and Abercrombie & Fitch have started their own gender-neutral lines or collections. 

Even jewelers like De Beers and Tiffany & Co. have released their own takes on gender-neutral jewelry and Gucci launched a non-binary gender neutral section the company calls Mx. 

In recent years, some companies have taken their efforts a step further, coupling their products with a charity or activist arm of their business. 

One example is The Phluid Project, which in tandem with its gender free clothing and accessories brand, is also committed to “embarking on a mission to improve humanity through not only fashion, but also community outreach, activism, and education.”

Get Phluid, which is the Phluid Project’s training, education and strategy consulting arm,provides gender expansive training for retailers and corporations to learn how to create safe and inclusive spaces for the LGBTQIA+ community, Rob Smith, CEO and founder of the Phluid Project, told Fox News Digital. Get Phluid’s clients include retailers like Macy’s, Nike and Banana Republic, as well as corporations like American Express, Uber and HBO, according to the organization’s website. 

“Sometimes companies …just show up in the month of June, but we help them show up authentically throughout the year … not just during parades and parties,”  Smith said. The gender-neutral category is “less like a trend and more like a movement,” he added. 

The Phluid Project’s non-profit, the Phluid Phoundation, collects donations from companies like the Saks Fifth Avenue Foundation, Smirnoff and Grey Goose to give nearly 100% of the proceeds to grassroots organizations in support of the LGBTQ+ community. 

Despite this growing trend in gender inclusive clothing, Schmidt predicted traditional men’s and women’s departments were not a thing of the past. 

“I think there’ll always be a men’s department and a women’s department as long as I’m alive,” Smith said. “But then there’s the space in the middle, space for people to express how they want to express instead of how a buyer decides.”

Schmidt noted consumers are “moving more towards the middle,” so retailers are marketing products to a larger audience, but she warns that consumer action must follow the marketing, which means it can’t be performative or use a group of people to sell a cause.

“For example, I know that companies in the past have been accused of only launching certain products during Pride Month and then for the rest of the year, maybe you wouldn’t see or hear anything,” she said. “I think that companies are becoming a lot more attuned to that and are truly getting behind these products because they’re aware that the market is there.”

“Retailers are opening up their eyes and looking at kids’ sections and looking at the language that they use to reinforce gender stereotypes,” Smith said. “Boys can wear pink and girls can wear blue, it’s okay, the world isn’t going to fall apart.”

But, some critics argue about potentially deeper harm. Kelsey Bolar, a Senior Policy Analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and creator of the “Identity Crisis” series, which highlights the experiences of detransitioners and their families, said clothing companies are joining doctors and therapists in profiting off of children’s mental illness and distress. 

“It might seem harmless to feature a gender inclusive clothing section, but this label caters to a group of vulnerable children and teens, reinforcing an ideology that puts them on a direct path to puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones and irreversible surgery, all of which have lifelong medical and emotional implications that we as a society are only beginning to understand,” Bolar said. 

She argued that there used to be a time when girls could shop in the boys’ section and boys could shop in the girls’ section “without any fanfare or controversy,” but now, “in an attempt to break down gender stereotypes, the gender ideology movement has had the reverse effect, telling girls that if they like to shop in the boys department, there must be something wrong.”

“It’s very sad, regressive and corporatist that fashion brands would seek to profit from this backwardness,” she added. 

In 2019, while Sey was working for Levi’s, the brand did its own gender-neutral campaign, but she said she has since “started to see things differently,” and noted that the greatest profit for the company came from traditional gender-focused products.  

Sey stood by the fact that the gender-neutral campaign touted a truism about the brand, that men wear women’s Levi’s and women wear men’s Levi’s, but that her position had changed.

“It wasn’t a reinvention of the product line,” Sey said. I still think it’s woke washing. If we want to call it that. And yes, I did it. And I would probably do things a little differently now.”

In 2015, Sey said Levi’s women’s business “took off” after they finally figured out how to tailor and market jeans for the female body. Up until that point, she said the brand essentially just made men’s jeans smaller for women.

“The thing that drove the most significant acceleration of Levi’s sales in the last ten years was marketing to women,” she said. “The fact is, is that women’s bodies are shaped differently than men’s bodies,” she said.

Bolar said she wishes she could brush off the gender-neutral trend, but feels it is part of a larger movement that is profiting off of confused and mentally ill adolescents, which makes the brands not just complicit, but participating in what is ultimately the mutilation of children and teenagers.

Bolar said she sees the push from corporations and retail brands as a “marketing ploy” and “virtue signaling for profit.” 

“We’ve seen this before with the LGB movement, and now they’re profiting off of the T,” she said.

She criticized individuals working at the clothing companies who “likely haven’t given the issue deep thought” or heard the stories of detransitioners to learn of the medical harms being caused when children and teenagers are encouraged to question their gender identity.  

“The pendulum has swung so far in the opposite direction that we’re now reinforcing them with a side dish of medical harm,” she said. 

Bolar said the ideology is “becoming impossible to escape” because it is promoted by everyone from school administrators to the executives of clothing brands. 

“They think they are making the world a more tolerant, better place by featuring these gender inclusive clothes, but what they’re really doing at the end of the day is figuring out a new way to market a gray sweatshirt and profit from it” Bolar said. 

“It’s just unnecessary,” she added. “If you want to break down gender stereotypes, just let girls shop in boys departments and boys shop in girls departments. It shouldn’t be a big deal. We shouldn’t be encouraging children to overthink and overanalyze the way they dress.”

https://nypost.com/2022/11/30/clothing-brands-push-for-gender-inclusive-clothing-ripped-as-marketing-ploy-confusing-to-children/

Hordes of illegal shops — some selling tainted pot — invade NYC

 There are “likely tens of thousands of illicit cannabis businesses” currently operating out of bodegas, smoke shops and other storefronts in New York City — with many of the pop-up shops selling bad or dangerously tainted weed, a new study reveals.

The survey, conducted by the New York Medical Cannabis Industry Association — in concert with the NJ Cannabis Trade Association and Connecticut Medical Cannabis Council — bought cannabis products from 20 unlicensed stores that publicly advertise selling marijuana, and had the products tested by an independent lab.

The lab results found the presence of potentially deadly E. coli, salmonella, heavy metals and pesticides in many products.

About 40% of the THC products failed at least one of the standard tests administered to legal cannabis products and only available at legal medical cannabis dispensaries, the study found.

The lab results also found an example of THC levels more than twice as advertised — with gummy bears labeled at 100 mg of THC at one shop testing at 204.77 mg, the survey alleges.

Marijuana
The study says unlicensed pop-up stores are selling tainted cannabis.

Eight other stores had flowered or other cannabis products that tested at a lower level of THC than advertised, the study claimed.

Half the locations did not ask for identification — a major concern given that youths under the age of 21 are barred from buying cannabis or THC products. Recent studies show that cannabis use among young adults and youths has skyrocketed nationwide as more states have legalized the recreational sale of marijuana.

The report also claimed 100% of the cannabis flowered products and edibles would flunk New York State’s stringent regulations.

Equally startling is the study’s admission that there are “likely tens of thousands of illicit cannabis businesses currently out of bodegas, smoke shops, or other retail locations” that are licensed to sell other products. “The estimated number of `back room’ illicit locations in New York City is far too vast,” the study said.

illegal pot shops
The study found that “thousands” of bodegas and black-market shops are illegally selling cannabis.

Aside from the health dangers of buying from illicit cannabis dealers, the tremendous proliferation of the black-market stores and mobile trucks that pay lower or no taxes on their products threatens to undermine the newly licensed New York state cannabis operators obligated to follow the rules and pay higher taxes that boost the cost of their products.

The state last week issued 36 licenses — 28 to entrepreneurs and eight to not-for-profit groups — to sell cannabis retail. But The Post discovered unregulated shops already operating brazenly across the city, including tidy neighborhoods such as Kew Gardens. 

Jars filled with marijuana leaves are displayed at the Weed World store on March 31, 2021, in Midtown New York. - New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed legislation legalizing recreational marijuana on March 31. 2021, with a large chunk of tax revenues from sales set to go to minority communities. New York joins 14 other US states and the District of Columbia in permitting cannabis after lawmakers in both state chambers, where Cuomo's Democratic Party holds strong majorities, backed the bill on March 30.
Thousands of unlicensed shops are selling cannabis in New York City.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 07: Individual marijuana plants in plastic cups are ready to be handed out at the NYC Cannabis Parade & Rally in Union Square on May 07, 2022 in New York City. Despite the heavy rain dozens showed up under umbrellas for the rally. This year’s event celebrates one year of legalization in New York. (Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
A new study found that unlicensed shops are selling marijuana tainted with salmonella, E. coli and lead.

“These bad actors present a clear danger that could undermine both the budding industry and the health of New York residents and visitors,” the study concluded.

“The report’s findings are deeply troubling and highlight the tremendous risks posed by unscrupulous firms operating above the law,” NYMCIA president Ngiste Abebe said.

“New York has a responsibility to not only protect the health and safety of its residents but also to fulfill the promise of a socially equitable adult-use market. Neither goal can
be realized without stricter enforcement against bad actors.”

Cannabis license applicant Juancarlos Huntt, co-founder of New York for Social and Economic Equity, fumed, “They’re opportunists that are retraumatizing our community and stopping our ability to build wealth.

“They are poisoning our black and brown communities. You cannot build wealth without health and these smoke shop owners are destroying the reputation of New York’s cannabis with their chemicals. They need to be stopped.”

https://nypost.com/2022/11/30/hordes-of-illegal-cannabis-shops-invade-nyc/

Sam Bankman-Fried defends FTX collapse, deflects blame

 In a nearly 90-minute interview at the New York Times Dealbook Summit on Wednesday, disgraced FTX founder and former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried said he "didn't try to commit fraud" as his crypto empire collapsed in a matter of days earlier this month.

Speaking with Andrew Ross Sorkin remotely from the Bahamas, Bankman-Fried, known as SBF in the crypto world, stated: "I did not knowingly comingle funds" between FTX and the trading firm Almadea Research, which he also co-founded.

In his first reply, Bankman-Fried asserted: "I didn’t ever try to commit fraud on anyone. I was shocked."

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 30: Andrew Ross Sorkin speaks with FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried during the New York Times DealBook Summit in the Appel Room at the Jazz At Lincoln Center on November 30, 2022 in New York City. The New York Times held its first in-person DealBook Summit since the start of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic with speakers from the worlds of financial services, technology, consumer goods, private investment, venture capital, banking, media, public relations, policy, government, and academia.   (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
Andrew Ross Sorkin speaks with FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried during the New York Times DealBook Summit in the Appel Room at the Jazz At Lincoln Center on November 30, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

At the beginning of this year, Bankman-Fried's offshore exchange and U.S subsidiary carried a combined valuation of $40 billion, according to data from Crunchbase. By the end of the first quarter, Bankman-Fried's personal wealth had risen to over $25 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaire Index.

Less than 7 months later, the 30-year old signed his crypto empire into Chapter 11 bankruptcy and resigned as CEO. FTX and affiliate firms owe more than a million customers an estimated $8 billion — assets it doesn't have on hand.

"I've had a bad month," Bankman-Fried told Sorkin. "This has not been any fun for me. But that's not what matters here. What matters here is the millions of customers, what matters here is the stakeholders in FTX. And what matters is trying to help them out."

Asked about his personal finances, Bankman-Fried said: "I think I might have one working credit card left." In a Tuesday interview with Axios, he said he no idea where his current net worth stood: “Am I allowed to say a negative number?” he joked, later offering he "had $100,000 in my bank account last I checked."

'I did not have the bandwidth'

In the past 30 days, Bankman-Fried has faced financial ruin and become the key subject of both civil and criminal investigations started by the U.S. Justice Department, Securities and Exchange Commission, Texas State Securities Board, as well as Bahamian authorities.

Appearing visibly nervous — at one time spilling a LaCroix on his shirt — Bankman-Fried tried to insist on a lack of understanding about the interconnectedness between FTX and Alameda Trading, including any access to customer funds Alameda may have had.

In Bankman-Fried's telling, from FTX's earliest days, he was concerned about the conflict of interest between the exchange business and Alameda. Bankman-Fried's ignorance about the inner-workings of his own business, in his telling, were presented as a deliberate choice.

"I was worried about the conflict of interest, of being too involved," Bankman-Fried said. "I hadn’t been running Alameda, or thinking about its finances, or making those decisions."

Pressed about the source of profits for his combined businesses, Bankman-Fried said: "I think Alameda made trading profits, but FTX made profits as well. FTX had been growing profitable business."

He added that "I did not have the bandwidth or attention to run Alameda and FTX at once."

'By late November 6, I'm very nervous'

FTX’s whirlwind collapse started as a public spectacle on November 2, when a report from CoinDesk revealed leaked financials of Alameda Research.

Alameda's balance sheet showed not only did the bulk of its $14.6 billion in claimed assets come from holding crypto tokens created by Bankman-Fried enterprises, but also 92% of its $8 billion in liabilities were tied up in loans.

"Clearly I was not nearly cautious enough from the extreme downside perspective," Bankman-Fried said Wednesday, attributing much of his company's downfall to plunging crypto prices over the course of 2022.

In a convoluted and at times circular telling of how FTX ultimately collapsed, Bankman-Fried flagged November 6 as a crucial turning pint.

"By late November 6, I'm very nervous that things might end quite badly," Bankman-Fried said. That day Changpeng Zhao, CEO of rival crypto exchange Binance, said his company planned to sell their sizable holdings in FTX’s crypto token, FTT, due to "recent revelations."

The following day, in a since-deleted tweet, Bankman-Fried said: "FTX has enough to cover all client holdings. We don't invest client assets (even in treasuries). We've been processing all withdrawals, and will continue to be."

(Source: Wayback Machine)
(Source: Wayback Machine)

Behind the scenes, internal communications viewed by the New York Times showed in his final days as CEO, Bankman-Fried insisted he could find a way to keep FTX running despite mounting evidence and FTX lawyers pointing to the opposite.

On Wednesday, Bankman-Fried reiterated his view that there had been "a lot of fairly strong interest" in financing a bailout of FTX right until the bitter end.

By November 11, just five days after Bankman-Fried said he grew "nervous" about problems at his company, FTX had filed for bankruptcy.

“Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here,” FTX's new CEO John Jay Ray, the same lawyer responsible for winding down Enron in 2002, said in a November 17 filing.

FTX U.S.

At times on Wednesday, Bankman-Fried took pains to draw a distinction between FTX's U.S. business and its offshore exchange.

Bankman-Fried said FTX U.S. is currently fully solvent "to my knowledge" but did not offer an explanation for why the company filed bankruptcy. At various points, Bankman-Fried suggested FTX's U.S. business could open customer withdrawals today and meet their full obligations. Some insiders have told Yahoo Finance that the businesses may have been too difficult to untangle.

Asked by Sorkin whether he'd considered returning to the U.S., Bankman-Fried said: "I've thought about it" and that "to [his] knowledge" he'd be able to travel back to the U.S.

In reference to hearings scheduled by lawmakers regarding the collapse of FTX, Bankman-Fried said: "I would not be surprised if sometime I am [on Capitol Hill] talking about what happened to our representatives, or wherever else is most appropriate."

Asked by Sorkin whether his legal team had been advising him to give an extensive interview to the New York Times, Bankman-Fried said: "No, they are very much not. The classic advice, right, don't say anything, recede into a hole. That's not who I am, that's not who I want to be. And I think I have a duty to talk."

An interview between Bankman-Fried and George Stephanopoulos is set to air on Good Morning America Thursday morning.

'I don't know what my far future is'

Asked about his future on Wednesday, Bankman-Fried said: "I don't know what my far future is. When you fast forward I have no idea what I'm going to be doing a long time from now." He then steered the discussion back towards his desire to be "helpful wherever I can" in getting customer funds returned.

Near the end of the interview, Sorkin asked Bankman-Fried what he'd tell customers of other exchanges who were concerned about the safety of their assets.

"So, look, I don't know exactly what's going on at other exchanges," Bankman-Fried said. "I can tell you what I would think as a customer — look for the things FTX should've been able to supply."

When asked by Sorkin whether Bankman-Fried had been truthful during his interview on Wednesday, the disgraced founder demurred.

"I was as truthful as I'm knowledgable to be," Bankman-Fried said. "There are some things I wish I knew more about, but yes I was."

When pressed if Bankman-Fried agreed that he had lied at times during his leadership of FTX, Bankman-Fried said: "I don't know of times when I lied," — also conceding that there were times he served as a "marketer" for FTX's various businesses.

"I wish I'd spent more time dwelling on the downsides and less time thinking about the upsides," Bankman-Fried said.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/sam-bankman-fried-new-york-times-interview-001826684.html

Twitter becomes stage for China protests despite ban by Beijing

 Twitter is banned in China, but it is proving a critical platform for getting videos and images of protests occurring across the nation out to the rest of the world.

China’s robust internet censors have sprung into action to scrub domestic social media of photos and video streams showing demonstrations against harsh Covid restrictions, spurring citizens to circumvent the nation’s Great Firewall.

Twitter has been blocked in China since 2009, but people in the country are able to access it using virtual private networks, or VPNs, which disguise their locations. They can then send material via the platform’s messaging system to a handful of widely followed Twitter users, who in turn broadcast it globally.

Dozens of students and faculty demonstrate against strict anti-virus measures in China, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2022, at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. Protests in China, which were the largest and most wide spread in the nation in decades, include (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds / AP Images)

One Twitter user who lives outside China and goes by the name of Li Laoshi, or Teacher Li, said he has been receiving more than a dozen messages per second with protest material at some points since public unrest erupted—the same number he used to get a day—so that he could repost them publicly.

"My daily routine is: wake up, post online, and feed my cat," he said. The goal of the account, created in May 2020, is to record events that are subject to censorship in China, his profile states. It had more than 759,000 followers as of Wednesday, more than triple the number before protests began, according to social-media analytics site Social Blade.

Amid the protests, some search terms related to the protests have been flooded with pornography and other spam from what appear to be bot accounts, based on the high frequency of their postings and low follower counts, among other factors. Searches on Twitter in simplified Chinese in recent days for the names of large Chinese cities where protests occurred returned thousands of tweets containing advertisements for sexual services or meaningless content such as time stamps.

In this photo taken on Sunday, Nov. 27, 2022, a protester reacts as he is arrested by policemen during a protest on a street in Shanghai, China. Authorities eased anti-virus rules in scattered areas but affirmed China's severe "zero- COVID" strategy (AP Photo / AP Images)

Twitter also faced demands to reinstate at least two Twitter users who were posting content from the protests in recent days. The account owners said Twitter suspended their accounts citing violations of its rules against platform manipulation and spam. Both said they were wrongly banned and other Twitter users jumped to their defense. The accounts were later restored.

Twitter didn’t respond to a request for comment.

How Twitter handles such issues as China experiences its most widespread public dissent in decades will be an early test for the platform’s new owner, Elon Musk, who has pledged to allow largely unfettered free speech on the platform and to tackle the problem of bots. Mr. Musk’s Tesla Inc. relies heavily on China to manufacture its cars and as a sales market.

In this photo taken on Sunday, Nov. 27, 2022, policemen pin down and arrest a protester during a protest on a street in Shanghai, China. Authorities eased anti-virus rules in scattered areas but affirmed China's severe "zero- COVID" strategy Monday a (Associated Press / AP Images)

Social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook have been used in years past as tools of the opposition in insurrections against regimes that control the flow of information. Protesters used Facebook to communicate during the 2011 Egyptian revolution, while Twitter allowed Iranian protesters to alert the rest of the world about demonstrations there in 2009. More recently, activists whose street protests precipitated the military overthrow of Sudan’s longtime leader relied on social media in 2019 to spread the word.

Twitter has grown into a propaganda battleground for China in recent years as Beijing seeks to strengthen its global image and influence. Beijing has promoted its narratives on Twitter through a growing network of diplomatic and state-media accounts, and jailed dozens of people who use Twitter and other foreign platforms to allegedly disrupt public order and attack party rule.

Chinese authorities could pressure Twitter to address the content pertaining to the protests or try to hack accounts to stop it from further sharing information, said Patrick Poon, a human-rights activist and visiting scholar at Japan’s Meiji University who analyzes free speech.

placeholder
Chinese President

Chinese President Xi Jinping is seen at the end of the Chinese Communist Party's 20th Party Congress on a giant screen a commercial district of Hangzhou in eastern China's Zhejiang province on Sunday, Oct 23, 2022. China's economic growth accelerated (Chinatopix via AP / AP Newsroom)

"It’s definitely a test for Elon Musk and Twitter on how it will protect its users from hacking by authoritarian regimes," Mr. Poon said.

China’s State Council Information Office and the Cyberspace Administration of China didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Even though most people post on Twitter under pseudonyms, Chinese authorities have kept close tabs on those critical of the government on the platform. They have at times arrested or detained users over their activities on Twitter.

The rise of spam on protest-related content "points to this being an intentional attack to throw up informational chaff and reduce external visibility into protests in China," Alex Stamos, the director of the Stanford Internet Observatory who was until 2018 Facebook’s chief security officer, wrote on Twitter on Monday.

"Looks like we might have the first major failure to stop gov interference in the Musk era," he wrote.

Twitter has seen a wave of departures among its staff who moderate content, try to root out inflammatory material such as hate speech and defend against propaganda campaigns, with some analysts saying the company could be less well equipped to deal with attacks on accounts sharing material.

Chinese state-backed information operations have long taken place on Twitter but have been growing, analysts say.

Mr. Musk has complained for years about Twitter’s ability to measure and manage bots, the automated accounts on the platform that often produce spam.

Asked by a user on Twitter on Wednesday whether he was making progress removing bots generally on the platform, Mr. Musk said the company was, adding: "You should see some improvement by tomorrow."

Vickie Wang, a freelance writer and stand-up comedian in Taipei who had been retweeting videos and photos of protests, along with images of cats, to her roughly 500 followers, said her account was suspended Wednesday.

Twitter said in a message to her that the platform can’t be used "in a manner intended to artificially amplify or suppress information or engage in behavior that manipulates or disrupts people’s experience on Twitter."

"I’ve read through the entire page about spam and platform manipulation and I’ve done none of those things," said Ms. Wang. A review of her most recent activity over 24 hours showed she had mostly retweeted others in about a dozen tweets.

Another Twitter user reported her account was also suspended for the same reason, saying she didn’t know what she had done to trigger the ban.

Twitter didn’t respond to questions about the suspensions. Both Ms. Wang’s and the other user’s accounts were reinstated Wednesday shortly after The Wall Street Journal inquired about them.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/twitter-becomes-stage-china-protests-despite-ban-beijing