Apple should follow Google’s lead in refusing to carry Truth Social on its application store because the social media platform — founded by former President Donald Trump — has failed to moderate content that threatens physical violence. Apple claims to remove apps that include such content.
According to Axios, Google said that on August 19 it “notified Truth Social of several violations of standard policies” that need to be addressed in order for its app to go live on the Google Play store. Google said it reiterated to Truth Social that “having effective systems for moderating user-generated content” is a condition of its terms of service. A source told Axios that Google is specifically concerned about Truth Social’s failures to moderate “physical threats and incitements to violence.”
Truth Social’s failure to moderate violent threats on its platform has already been associated with at least one real world act of violence. On August 11, a man who had been amplifying conspiracy theories and threatening violence on Truth Social tried to infiltrate an FBI field office in Cincinnati while armed with an AR-15 rifle. The man fired a nail gun into the office and was subsequently killed by officers.
As Media Matters predicted when Truth Social launched in February, the social media platform appears to have repeatedly violated Apple’s safety policies. Apple must follow Google’s lead and enforce its own policies to keep its users safe.
Apple’s policies prohibit the distribution of apps that fail to moderate dangerous and defamatory content
Apple — which is the sole gatekeeper of what apps appear on iPhones and other popular Apple products — requires apps with “user-generated content or social networking services” to have “a method for filtering objectionable material from being posted to the app.” According to Apple, objectionable content includes “content that is offensive, insensitive, upsetting, intended to disgust, in exceptionally poor taste, or just plain creepy.” Apple cites “defamatory, discriminatory, or mean-spirited content” and “false information and features” as examples.
The App Store Review Guidelines also warn that apps that end up being used primarily for “making physical threats” or “bullying do not belong on the App Store and may be removed without notice.”
Last year, following the January 6 insurrection, Apple removed conservative platform Parler from its App Store for failing to adequately handle “violent threats and hateful content on its platform that encouraged the riot.” Apple later denied Parler reentry to the App Store, noting that the app still contained “highly objectionable content” including “easily identified offensive uses of derogatory terms regarding race, religion and sexual orientation, as well as Nazi symbols.”
Truth Social has repeatedly failed to moderate content that threatens or incites violence
Just as Trump has historically failed to condemn violent rhetoric, Truth Social has failed to moderate violent rhetoric.
Hours after the FBI conducted its lawful and warranted search of his home, Trump posted a video to Truth Social in which he declared, over what seemed to be a QAnon song, that we are “a nation in decline” and alleged that “we are a nation that has weaponized its law enforcement against the opposing political party.”
According to a report by The New York Times, following the FBI search, Truth Social erupted with “predictions of imminent civil war and calls for violence”: