Flagging media violations in Tweets

Check out this article for more information on Twitter’s Media Policies.

How do I flag media in Tweets?

You may encounter media in Tweets that requires review by the Twitter team. If there is content you feel should be reviewed by the Twitter team because you believe it should be behind a warning message, or because it contains illegal content, please follow these instructions to flag the media:

  1. Go to the bottom of the media
  2. Click on the “Flag this media” button

Please remember that if you are seeing something you don’t like, and Twitter hasn’t placed a warning label before it, it’s possible that it doesn’t meet our threshold for a warning on the media.

What happens if my media gets flagged by other users?

If one of your Tweets containing media is reported, it will be sent to the Twitter team for review. If we find that the media wasn’t marked as being possibly sensitive at the time of the upload:

  • we label the media as being possibly sensitive
  • change your account setting to “Mark my media as containing potentially sensitive content” so that future uploads are marked accordingly

You will receive an email letting you know that we’ve labeled your media and changed your media setting. You will be able to change your media settings on your account settings page, though this image and any other images that have been labeled will remain marked as “possibly sensitive”.   

If you repeatedly upload media that are mislabeled, the Twitter team will:

  • label your media as having possibly sensitive content
  • permanently move your account setting over to “Mark my media as having potentially sensitive content” so that your future uploads have an warning message.

Can I appeal a decision made by the Twitter team?

Right now there isn’t a way to appeal this decision, so you should definitely make sure your media uploading setting is marked appropriately. If you repeatedly upload media that is mismarked, the Twitter team will move your account setting permanently to “Mark my media as having possibly sensitive content” to avoid future mismarked images.

How to report other Twitter Rules violations

Profile photos, header photos, and background images

We remove profile photos, header photos, or background images that contain pornographic content. To report pornographic content on a profile photo, header photo, or background image, please go here.

Privacy violations

If someone has posted your private information on Twitter, please submit a Support ticket. Please make sure to select the “Something  Else” category, and then select “Harassment” from the drop down menu on the webform. Once you've submitted your ticket, we’ll email you a ticket confirmation with more information.

We remove information such as:

  • credit card information
  • social security or other national identity numbers
  • addresses or locations that are considered private
  • non-public, personal phone numbers
  • non-public, personal email addresses

Keep in mind that though you may consider some information to be private, it may not fall within our privacy policy. Check out this article for more information on private information.

Harassment

If you feel you are being harassed, please review our article on abusive users for more information on what you can do now, if you should contact local authorities, and how to submit a support ticket.

Spam

If you think you’ve found a spam profile, follow these steps to report it to us:

  1. Visit the Spam account’s profile
  2. Click the Drop-Down actions menu box
  3. Click on “Report @username for spam.”

Check out our policy page for more information on reporting spam.

Copyright

How do I report an image hosted by Twitter?

If you need to file a copyright report for a profile photo, header photo, background image, or image hosted by Twitter, please review our copyright policy page for more information.

How do I report an image hosted by a Third Party (e.g., TwitPic, YFrog, etc.)?

You’ll be able to flag any image displayed on Twitter, however, any warning message will only be seen by viewers who access that media through Twitter.

Different companies have different media hosting policies that may or may not mirror Twitter’s; you should contact their customer support for further information on the specifics of their policies.

Here are some links to popular image hosting site support pages:

Flickr:  http://www.flickr.com/help/with/abuse/
Instagr.am: http://help.instagram.com/451792218214327/
Lockerz http://support.lockerz.com/anonymous_requests/new
Twitgoo: http://twitgoo.com/a/help
TwitPic: http://twitpic.com/contact.do
YFrog: http://imageshack.us/content.php?page=email&q=abuse