March 9, 2019

No Image

Amnesty International: New Twitter Feature Leaves Burden On Users Experiencing Abuse

Twitter is developing a feature aimed at making the site less toxic for users. NPR’s Michel Martin speaks with Amnesty International’s Rasha Abdul-Rahim, who has studied harassment on Twitter.



MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

We’re going to return now to our Troll Watch series.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MARTIN: This is where we bring you stories of cybersecurity attacks, bots and of course, internet trolls. This week, Twitter confirmed that users will eventually be able to press a button that says hide tweet that would, as you might imagine, allow users to hide certain responses to their tweets. And that means if you tweet something and you get nasty or abusive replies back, you could make those replies invisible to others.

Now one reason this is of interest of course is the abuse directed at women on Twitter, something Amnesty International researched extensively in a report recently. We spoke with Amnesty about that report, so we wanted to follow up to ask them what they make of this new planned feature. Joining us now is Rasha Abdul Rahim, deputy director of Amnesty Tech. She’s with us via Skype from London. Rasha, thanks so much for talking to us.

RASHA ABDUL-RAHIM: No problem. Thank you for having me.

MARTIN: So tell us about this new Twitter feature. What’s your understanding of how it would work?

ABDUL-RAHIM: Yeah, so my understanding is that Twitter’s developed this new feature as a way to allow people – women – who received tweets that may not reach the threshold of being abusive or hateful to allow them another way to hide problematic tweets they may be receiving so that they’re not as visible to them and to others. But my understanding is that people will still be able to view those tweets if they click the tab that shows the hidden tweets.

MARTIN: So what are the pros and the cons of this?

ABDUL-RAHIM: I see four different issues with this. I think the first one is the – I think there’s a danger here of brushing the issue under the carpet, so brushing the issue of problematic tweets under the carpet and not holding people who are sending those tweets accountable. So these kinds of tweets, as I said before, may not necessarily reach the threshold of abuse or hateful conduct, but they still contain hurtful or hostile content, and especially if they’re repeated to an individual on multiple occasions.

And these are the kinds of things that can reinforce negative or harmful stereotypes against a group of individuals, such as women, such as women of color. And they may still have a silencing effect on them. So I think here is – the key is, you know, will the effect of this be that those kinds of repeat offenders will not have any kind of accountability leveled to them for sending, you know, a barrage of these kinds of problematic tweets?

MARTIN: Two criticisms I’ve seen come from different angles – one is that this still puts the onus on women to solve the problem…

ABDUL-RAHIM: Absolutely. Yeah, that was the next point I was going to make.

MARTIN: …As opposed to putting the onus on Twitter. But the other side of the equation is some are arguing that this allows for censorship. I mean, it could allow for say, public officials to, you know, decide that they don’t want other people to see legitimate criticism directed at them just cause they don’t like it.

ABDUL-RAHIM: Yeah, totally. These are two issues as well that we’ve spotted. So the burden is still, as you say, on the individuals experiencing the abuse to label or to hide every single tweet. And this doesn’t only take time, but it also takes an emotional toll on those individuals who are receiving that abuse. And it’s almost as if Twitter is kind of outsourcing that responsibility to the people who are experiencing this abuse. And as you say, it could also have a silencing effect on free speech if powerful public figures such as politicians can hide dissent or prevent users from holding public figures to account.

MARTIN: Could you just remind people for those who did not hear our prior conversation why you feel that abusive tweets, this kind of communication, rises to the level of a human rights concern, such that Amnesty would take as much time and effort as it has to investigate it? Why do you think this is a problem?

ABDUL-RAHIM: It’s a problem because if women are disproportionately experiencing abuse or harassment or are targets of problematic tweets, then this means that this could have a silencing effect on them. And this is something that we found in our research that women tend to change the way in which they interact on these platforms. They tend to, you know, withdraw from Twitter or change the way in which they use their language on Twitter in order to not subject themselves or open themselves up to abuse.

And, you know, our research has shown that 7.1 percent of tweets that were sent to women in this study were problematic or abusive, which amounted to 1.1 million tweets mentioning 778 women across the year, which amounts also to one every 30 seconds. And we also found that women of color were 34 percent more likely to be mentioned in abusive or problematic tweets than white women. Black women were disproportionately targeted, being 84 percent more likely than white women to be mentioned in abusive or problematic tweets.

So this is clearly a problem. And if Twitter is not responding or addressing this problem effectively, then this obviously will have an impact on women’s ability to freely express themselves on the platform.

MARTIN: That’s Rasha Abdul Rahim, deputy director of Amnesty Tech at Amnesty International. We reached her via Skype in London. Rasha, thank you so much for talking with us.

ABDUL-RAHIM: Thank you, too. Good bye.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Jaslynn Gallegos On Being A Woman In Wrestling

NPR’s Scott Simon talks with high school wrestler Jaslynn Gallegos of Brighton, Colo. A male wrestler refused to face off against her at a state championship.



SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

A high school wrestler named Brendan Johnston refused to compete against two opponents and forfeited those matches at the Colorado State Wrestling Championship last month. Those two opponents, Angel Rios and Jaslynn Gallegos, are women. Brendan Johnston told reporters he wasn’t comfortable wrestling with women. Jaslynn Gallegos went on to win in fifth place in that tournament. She is a senior at Skyview High School and joins us now from Brighton, Colo. Ms. Gallegos, thanks so much for being with us.

JASLYNN GALLEGOS: Yeah. No problem.

SIMON: First, congratulations.

JASLYNN: Thank you.

SIMON: How did you feel when Brendan Johnston declined to compete against you?

JASLYNN: Well, one of my things is I just want to be a wrestler, not necessarily defined as a girl wrestler. So it kind of hurt me a little bit because, you know, I just want to be this wrestler. And my gender is holding me back.

SIMON: Brendan Johnston told reporters, quote, “I don’t want to treat a young lady like that on the mat or off the mat and not to disrespect the heart or the effort that she’s put in. That’s not what I want to do.” Do you accept that?

JASLYNN: Yeah, I mean, everybody has their own beliefs. But at the same time, it’s not just black and white. Like, you can’t really change what somebody believes. Like, for me, I believe that I’m just a wrestler. And he believes that you’re not just a wrestler. You know, you’re a female wrestler.

SIMON: Now, let me ask. You know what’s going on in this country and around the world. Can you see in this day and age why a young man just may not want to put himself in the position of applying force on a woman or pressing against her even if it’s in a public athletic competition?

JASLYNN: You know, I feel like that whole situation is something that the wrestling community has gone past, especially, like, since I’ve wrestled hundreds of guys. Like, that’s not an issue here, you know? It’s kind of unheard of in the wrestling community for a girl to say something happened during a match.

It’s wrestling, and I think we all understand that it’s a very physical sport. You’re literally fighting someone to put them to their back. It’s – you’re not thinking about anything else at the time because you’re trying to win a match. For me, when I wrestle, it’s literally all muscle memory because I practice my shots and my stand-ups and my sit-outs and my pinning combination so often I don’t even have to think when I wrestle.

SIMON: Anything you’d like to say to boys who might be reluctant to wrestle you?

JASLYNN: You know, just wrestle me. You know, you might get pinned. You might win by one or two points. You might even pin me. But I’m definitely worth giving a match to, you know?

SIMON: And I gather your brothers are wrestlers, too, right?

JASLYNN: Yes. My older brother, he wrestled his whole life, as well – qualified for state. And then my two little brothers, they are currently wrestling.

SIMON: Bet you can beat them.

JASLYNN: Oh, yeah, definitely – both of…

SIMON: (Laughter).

JASLYNN: …Them at the same time.

SIMON: (Laughter) I gather you started wrestling when you were 5.

JASLYNN: Yes. I did.

SIMON: Well, so you’ve been at it a while. Anything you would like to tell young women who want to wrestle?

JASLYNN: You know, just like anything, there’s going to be points where it gets really hard, and you don’t know if you can do it. But, you know, if you push yourself and just keep going, especially if you love it, it’s worth it in the end to just keep on doing it.

SIMON: Jaslynn Gallegos, a wrestler at Skyview High School in Thornton, Colo., thanks so much for being with us.

JASLYNN: Yeah. No problem.

(SOUNDBITE OF VETIVER SONG, “BACKWARDS SLOWLY”)

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Cancer Leads Athlete To Tough Choice

BrittLee Bowman competes during a recent cyclecross race. She was diagnosed with breast cancer and faced a decision on how to treat it.

Courtesy of Dan Chabanov


hide caption

toggle caption

Courtesy of Dan Chabanov

BrittLee Bowman had a huge decision to make as she lined up at an elite cyclocross race. Cyclocross is a sport that throws obstacles at you, from sand pits to staircases to knee high barriers. And this one, alongside the Hudson River in Queens, N.Y. was no different.

Bowman pedaled. People cheered. And if you saw her that day… you probably had no idea what she was wrestling with. That decision she had to make: Do I have both my breasts removed?

It all started with a tiny lump. “Sometime in October I just you know was touching my boob and felt a lump,” she says. “It was about the size of a pea.”

She immediately called her mom, Sara Bowman. Her mom says she was probably more concerned than her daughter, but she didn’t let on.

Bowman made an appointment with her doctor. And the doctor thought it was best to do an ultrasound. And the ultrasound showed another lump. Two total. And that led to a biopsy. And the biopsy led to waiting.

“I’m telling you,” she says. “In my mind, I did not have cancer.”

So Bowman went on with her life. She was out shopping when she got the call.

“You have breast cancer,” she says the doctor told her. “And I was like, ‘Wait. What!?'”

The doctor clarified her statement, telling Bowman the result came back positive. She had stage one multifocal invasive ductal carcinoma, ductal carcinoma in situ, and lobular carcinoma in situ all in her left breast. Her right was unaffected. She called her mom.

“I don’t even remember what I said,” Sara Bowman says. “I was just trembling.”

For BrittLee, the cancer diagnosis just didn’t make sense.

Rachel Rubino and Bowman at a recent cyclecross event. “A lot of people in my family have had cancer,” Rubino says. “My mom passed away of breast cancer when I was 22. So for me it hits this really deep place. You know? It’s like being a woman and being an athlete. This can happen to any of us.”

Courtesy of Dan Chabanov


hide caption

toggle caption

Courtesy of Dan Chabanov

“You can exercise everyday of the week for an hour-and-a-half — except on Sundays, you need a rest day. Be pescatarian for six years. Eat lots of fruits and vegetables all the time. Drink green juice all the time. You know, you can be pretty healthy and live an active lifestyle and still get cancer,” she says. “It sucks.”

Bowman started researching her particular cancer: medical journals and anything she could get her hands on. Meanwhile, there were more tests. Her doctor gave her options: lumpectomy, single mastectomy, or double mastectomy.

“So basically, if I chose double mastectomy and then take care of everything right now then I hopefully will not have a recurrence of this cancer,” she says.

Becca Schepps visits Bowman in the hospital.

Courtesy of BrittLee Bowman


hide caption

toggle caption

Courtesy of BrittLee Bowman

Thirty-four and single, she wanted the option to have kids. Some treatments impact fertility. Then there were a host of other concerns, including how it could impact her athletic career, and also, how she looked at her body.

“I’ve always been a very comfortable person with my body… And I know that a lot of women struggle with their bodies and don’t love them,” she says. “And so I had this fear that the surgery would change that about me. It wasn’t totally the fear of it changing my body, it’s like more about like the fear of it changing how I felt about my body.”

She continued to research and read. But sometimes journals feel impersonal.

So she looked up #doublemastectomy on Instagram. “And they’re posting everything. They’re showing: This is what it looks like right after surgery. This is what it looks like when you have a bad reconstruction that you’re sad about and that makes you want to get surgery again. This is what it looks like when you’re happy that your surgery went well. This is what it looks like when you have radiation. And so just finding that on Instagram was actually really helpful for me to see other women my general age going through this experience.”

She soon had her surgery date. But still hadn’t decided which surgery to get.

“It was the thing I thought about every moment.”

All that was going through her head when she entered that cyclocross race in Queens.

***

That day, Bowman powered through the course, battling for second place with rider Rachel Rubino. The two are competitors and also friends.

“Hey, I’ve been thinking about you so much all week, Rubino told her as they raced. “I love you so much.”

Rachel Rubino finished in second place and Bowman took third in the Rainey Park race.



Eric Lee Bowman


hide caption

toggle caption



Eric Lee Bowman

By the last lap, Rubino was in second and Bowman had third place wrapped up. They’d get to stand on the podium together. It meant a lot for Bowman. But it meant a lot for Rubino, too.

“A lot of people in my family have had cancer,” Rubino says. “My mom passed away of breast cancer when I was 22. So for me it hits this really deep place. You know? It’s like being a woman and being an athlete. This can happen to any of us.”

***

Days after the race, Bowman made her decision. She’d have surgery to remove both her breasts. On the day of the appointment she went to the hospital with family and a friend.

“It was just a long wait a long wait in there …” says Sarah Bowman.

Finally, it was time.

“So they they placed the I.V. in my arm while I was in the holding area with my family,” says Bowman. “And they walked me down a hallway. And there was an elevator. And I was with the nurse. And I had to say bye to my family. So I go into this elevator. The doors close. And I was like in the elevator with the nurse and I was just crying. … It’s just scary. You know you don’t want to have to do that, but you’re trying to fix the problem.”

She walked into the operating room in her gown, past a table of surgical tools. She climbed onto the table. And she stared into silver lamp lights.

***

Three weeks after her surgery, she was still healing and feeling hopeful about racing again.

“I got on my bike on a 28-degree day here in New York City. And I rode laps in Central Park,” she says.

Athletes are like that: Tough. But Bowman is quick point out that she only had stage one. She’s young. There’s a lot of women dealing with far worse. That said, there’s still radiation ahead, healing from reconstructive surgery, and five to 10 years of tamoxifen to ward off a recurrence.

“I’m like did I survive yet? I don’t know. Do I still have cancer? I’m a little unclear on that right now. Maybe I do still have cancer? Or maybe maybe it was all cut out of me? I’m not quite sure,” she says.

You can see the wear on Bowman’s face, but also the resolve. She’ll wake up. Roll out of bed. Do her treatment. Get on with her life.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)