The microblogging site is a vital tool for candidates, political parties and journalists to break news and fuel debate, but it has also been used to spread fake news, such as manipulated video clips, and to abuse and threaten individuals.
It said last month it would stop all political advertising, making the British election one of the first major tests for the new policy.
It said on Monday it was also taking additional steps to make sure the British election was “healthy, open and safe”.
It is launching a tool for people to report deliberately misleading information about the voting process, for example how to vote or register to vote or false information about the date or time for the election.
Twitter to ban political ads in apparent swipe at Facebook
“We’ve established a cross-functional UK elections team that will proactively protect the integrity of the election-related conversation, support partner escalations, and identify potential threats from malicious actors,” it said in a blog post.
Users taking part in the election debate will be able to use a customized election emoji that is a visual play on the word “Vote” activated by the use of hashtags including #GE19, it said.
Chief Executive Jack Dorsey said last month that the platform would ban political advertising.
He said the company could not credibly say it was working hard to stop people from spreading misleading information and then allow somebody to pay to target and force people to see their political ad in which they could say “whatever they want”.
Facebook’s Zuckerberg says company considered banning political ads
That move increased the pressure on Facebook which is continuing to allow political ads, even if they contain false or misleading claims. Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said the social media company did not want to stifle political debate.
Twitter will publish details of the ban on November 15 and enforce it from November 22.
It is also increasing investment in systems that can detect abuse before it is flagged by users, with half of the abusive tweets now identified by technology.
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