Twitter announced on Friday it provided the French justice "data that might allow identification of some authors" of anti-Semitic tweets, reported to the court for an association.
The transmission of data "puts an end to the dispute" with the Union of Jewish Students of France (UEJF) and both parties "agreed to continue to collaborate actively to fight against racism and anti-Semitism respecting their national laws," adds Twitter on your statement.
This collaboration aims to take "measures to improve the accessibility of the notification procedure for twittes illegal," the group.
The UEJF had announced in March that showed a lawsuit against Twitter and its president Dick Costolo did not reply to a request from the French court to identify the perpetrators of anti-Semitic twittes.
"Twitter shows indifference to not respect the decision of January 24," the tribunal de grande instance of Paris which gave two weeks for the social network to identify the perpetrators of anti-Semitic twittes explained Jonathan Hayoun, president of UEJF.
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