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This frame grab from a Twitter post from @OccupyWallStNYC shows a news photo of a New York City police officer wielding a baton during an Occupy Wall Street action in New York. The photo was posted in response to a Twitter request by the NYPD to offer up feel-good photos of people posing with police officers. NYPD Commissioner William Bratton on Wednesday, April 23, 2014 admits he was caught off guard by the harsh response to a harmless attempt at community outreach on Twitter, but says he has no plans to abandon social media. (AP Photo/Twitter)

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This Tuesday, April 22, 2014 photo shows Peoria Mayor Jim Ardis speaking at a City Council meeting in Peoria, Ill. , where he defended his actions in response to a fake Twitter account set up in his name, saying he felt his identity was stolen and that the comments posted were "absolute filth." Ardis filed a criminal complaint over the Twitter account, which authorities say included posts about drugs and sex. (AP Photo/Journal Star, Ron Johnson)

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This May 7, 2013 photo shows Peoria Mayor Jim Ardis addressing in a City Council meeting in Peoria, Ill. Police officers trying to find out who was behind a fake Twitter account set up in the name of Peoria's mayor raided a home Tuesday, April 15, 2014, seizing computers and phones and hauling several people in to be questioned. No arrests were made in connection with the Twitter account. (AP Photo/Journal Star, Ron Johnson)

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Image: Twitter

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Image: (Twitter, Julia Louis-Dreyfus)