- I do not believe Twitter was being intentionally hostile in this event.
- I do believe Twitter displayed a decision making failure in this event.
- I do believe this event shined a high-profile spotlight on Twitter's decision making failures that has caused their long-standing policy to indirectly benefit hate and harassment while simultaneously suppressing women and minority voices.
- I do believe that Twitter's policy has failed so badly for so long that they are complicit in abuse.
I do not disagree with any of that. The comments were just aimed at some of those who go straight to the worst case scenario without any evidence. It took a short amount of time to get an official response and the account reinstated after the reasoning explained. As bad as Twitter are, the alternative of them
specifically banning her account to stop her talking about sexual abuse is the kind of thing if proven would really close the site down. It's on life support as it is, and sometimes there are explanations for situations that are more plausible. What should always matter is what is the truth, not what does anyone
want the truth to be.
Twitter is getting bombarded now with other kinds of feedback which is fine (and everyone hopes they "listen"), it's just not helpful if people start conspiracy theories where there isn't one. That's happening far too much in general on the internet.
Yep, this wasn't some big conspiracy on Twitter's part to silence oppressed women, just their utter incompetence when it comes to enforcing their policies.
Pretty much, it's Twitter's incompetence at applying their TOS evenly and mostly across the board. There are a million examples of this person did x and didn't get banned and this person did x and did get banned. Or delayed reactions between the two.