As Twitter continues to combat misinformation on the platform, the company is reportedly losing a key executive in charge of content moderation.
Twitter’s head of trust and safety, Ella Irwin, tells(Opens in a new window) Reuters that she resigned from the company, hours after Irwin’s company Slack account was quietly shut down, according(Opens in a new window) to Fortune.
Irwin took over the trust and safety job after the previous head, Yoel Roth, left the position in November after Musk’s acquisition of the social media company. In Roth’s case, he resigned, citing Musk’s efforts to dismantle Twitter’s existing content moderation approach.
It's unclear why Irwin resigned, but she departed as owner Elon Musk was fielding complaints from The Daily Wire, a conservative news outlet, about Twitter limiting the reach of its controversial film, What’s a Woman?, which discusses transgender issues.
The Daily Wire says(Opens in a new window) Twitter restricted the film from being circulated on the social media platform because it contained “hateful conduct” and “misgendering.” In response, Musk tweeted(Opens in a new window) back: “This was a mistake by many people at Twitter. It is definitely allowed.”
Hence, it’s possible Irwin left over conflicts with Musk’s approach to content moderation or the lack thereof. Musk has since been promoting(Opens in a new window) the film on his own Twitter account, although he notes the video will be “advertising-restricted, as advertisers have the right to decide what content their ads appear with.”
Irwin marks the second recent high-profile executive departure from Twitter. Last week, Twitter’s head of engineering, Foad Dabiri, also resigned(Opens in a new window) shortly after US
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