Twitter Removes Image Post by Trump Over NYT Copyright Complaint

Twitter Removes Image Post by Trump Over NYT Copyright Complaint
In this photo illustration, a Twitter logo is displayed on a mobile phone with President Trump's Twitter page shown in the background in Arlington, Va., on May 27, 2020. Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images
Reuters
Updated:

Twitter Inc has taken down an image tweeted by President Donald Trump from its platform, after receiving a copyright complaint from the New York Times.

The original tweet by Trump issued on June 30, showed a meme that read “In reality they’re not after me they’re after you I’m just in the way” with Trump’s picture in the background.

The background picture was taken by a New York Times photographer, to accompany a feature article on then presidential candidate Trump in September 2015.

Twitter now displays the message “This image has been removed in response to a report from the copyright holder,” in place of the tweet.

President Donald Trump makes remarks before signing an executive order in the Oval Office that will punish Facebook, Google, and Twitter for the way they police content online, on May 28, 2020. (Doug Mills/The New York Times/Getty Images)
President Donald Trump makes remarks before signing an executive order in the Oval Office that will punish Facebook, Google, and Twitter for the way they police content online, on May 28, 2020. Doug Mills/The New York Times/Getty Images

The move by the social media site is the latest instance of content posted by Trump being flagged or removed, due to what Twitter says are copyright complaints, violation of its policy on threatening violence, among others.

Twitter removed the image after it received a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) complaint from the New York Times, which owns the rights to the photo, according to a notice posted on the Lumen Database.

Employees walk past a lighted Twitter log as they leave the company's headquarters in San Francisco on Aug. 13, 2019. (Glenn Chapman/AFP/Getty Images)
Employees walk past a lighted Twitter log as they leave the company's headquarters in San Francisco on Aug. 13, 2019. Glenn Chapman/AFP/Getty Images

The database collects and analyzes legal complaints and requests for the removal of online materials.

Twitter began challenging Trump’s tweets in May and has repeatedly clashed with him since then. The president has threatened to change laws on social media after Twitter labeled one of his tweets about postal voting inaccurate and hid a tweet about looting, which Twitter said fomented violence.

A campaign tribute video to George Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapolis police custody, was also disabled by Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram on their platforms last month, due to copyright complaints.

Twitter and NYT did not respond when reached by Reuters for further comment.

By Bhargav Acharya