The White House social media director slammed Twitter as the enemy on Monday after his Saturday tweet on “Sleepy Joe” Biden was labeled “manipulated media” by the social media platform.
— Cat Zakrzewski (@Cat_Zakrzewski) March 8, 2020
The tweet in question features a clip taken from Biden’s speech in St. Louis, Missouri, on Saturday and showed the former vice president fumbling over his words. Scavino highlighted the portion of the speech in which Biden said “we can only re-elect Donald Trump.”
— Dan Scavino (@DanScavino) March 8, 2020
The same clip was later retweeted by the US president.
However, the full clip of Biden’s comments presented a much different message.
“We can only re-elect Donald Trump if in fact we get engaged in this circular firing squad here,” the former vice president said, referring to the polarized messaging that has resulted from the tight primary race between himself and Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT).
— YpsiGal🇺🇸 (@YpsiGal) March 9, 2020
According to Twitter guidelines proposed in November 2019, the platform defines manipulated media as “any photo, audio, or video that has been significantly altered or fabricated in a way that intends to mislead people or changes its original meaning.”
It was later confirmed by Twitter that the new policy would be put into place beginning March 5.
“Things like selected editing or cropping or slowing down or overdubbing, or manipulation of subtitles would all be forms of manipulated media that we would consider under this policy,” Yoel Roth, Twitter’s head of site integrity, told TechCrunch last month.
Scavino argued that Twitter was wrong to flag his video since it was “NOT manipulated,” in his opinion. However, his clipping of Biden’s full statement did change the original meaning, meeting the criteria for the label.
Being that the social media website just unveiled the label in the past few days, there are some glaring kinks that need to be worked out. As of this article’s publication, the “manipulated media” tag does not appear when a user clicks on the detailed view of the tweet to read replies. Bloomberg reported that this issue has been identified to Twitter, and a spokesperson claimed the company is working to resolve it.