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Tuesday, 30 April 2024 / Published in Woo on Tech

Europe leads the charge against misinformation

Once again it looks like we will have to leave it to the European Union to be the adult in the room, especially when it comes to US companies running roughshod over everyone in pursuit of the almighty dollar. We have them to thank for things like taking Microsoft to task for various monopolistic tactics with the Windows OS, getting Apple to make iPhones with USB-C charging ports and the whole General Data Protection Regulation thing which made the internet a little obnoxious for everyone for a short while, but sometimes medicine doesn’t always taste good. This time around the EU has Meta in its sights for Facebook’s recent plans to decommission its political election monitoring platform CrowdTangle without offering any sort of replacement, something that the European Commission says could be a violation of the recently implemented Digital Services Act.

What this means for you

Normally, regulatory reform started in the EU takes a while to make its way across the pond to us (if it makes it at all), but fortunately for us, election season starts in June for the EU, and the EC is concerned that Facebook is not doing enough to combat misinformation on its platform. Facebook isn’t the only platform the that is under DSA scrutiny: both TikTok and Twitter also have pending investigations that will hopefully result in something more than the wrist slaps handed out by US regulatory bodies. In the case of Facebook, they could be facing fines upwards of $8.5 billion for failing to “tackle the spread of illegal content, online disinformation and other societal risks.” Even for a company as big as Meta, that’s going to sting. The EC has given Meta 5 days to provide an explanation. While it’s likely that Zuckerberg and crew will provide the usual corporate platitudes it always trots out in these situations, the EC’s track record seems to indicate that hand-waving and vague promises won’t be enough. Everyone, cross your fingers!

Image by Ralph from Pixabay

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Tagged under: digital services act, eu, gdpr, meta, misinformation, politics

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