After Belfast riots, UK reminds social platforms they're obligated to remove hateful content

📌 Diğer 📰 Engadget 🕐 3 saat önce
After Belfast riots, UK reminds social platforms they're obligated to remove hateful content

The UK's communications regulator has reminded social media platforms they have a duty to minimize hateful content, not encourage it.

X owner Elon Musk seems to be among those encouraging violence.

Ofcom, the UK's communications regulator, has published an open letter reminding social platforms of their legal obligation to heed the Online Safety Act 2023, which requires platforms to "assess and mitigate the risks of illegal activity" including "content amounting to offenses of stirring up hatred or provoking violence." Platforms are furthermore asked to "reduce the risk of illegal content appearing," with Ofcom providing lengthy guidance on what constitutes illegal content.

The letter comes in the wake of civil unrest in Belfast. Monday, a Dublin man was stabbed in the street in an apparent knife attack; the assailant, a Sudanese national, was charged with attempted murder on Tuesday. The race and presumed immigration status on the attacker quickly became fodder for politicization among far-right anti-immigration figures in the UK. Overnight, Belfast became the center of a riot in which several homes in immigrant-heavy neighborhoods were set on fire by masked men, according to the Washington Post.

Musk has around 240.1 million followers on the platform he owns; he has in the past reportedly tweaked the algorithm of the site to increase the reach of his own tweets.

In his fugue state of posting, he also retweeted an account by the name of Visegrád 24, which showed an image from the attack side by side with an image from the arrest of Henry Nowak shortly before his death. Nowak was a student who was fatally stabbed by a Sikh man, Vickrum Digwa, in December, but was arrested after Digwa's brother called the police accusing Nowak of a racial attack.

None of Musk's retweets specifically call for violence directly. Musk's tweets come in the face of a pledge the company made to the UK back in May, where it said it would work to reduce "hate and terror content."

The letter comes a single day after Ofcom announced new safety measures platforms would need to adopt to tackle "spikes in illegal content during a crisis." That includes the sort of disinformation that is rapidly propagated in the wake of a real-world tragedy to encourage further violence.

Of course, Ofcom's ability to address issues like this is already being challenged; in May, Meta sued the agency, saying its regime of penalties was "disproportionate." But perhaps the platforms will respond to Ofcom's not-even-sternly-worded letter reminding them of their public duty.

📌 Kaynak

Bu özet Engadget kaynağından otomatik derlenmiştir. Tamamı için orijinal habere gidin.

Orijinal haberi oku →
📱
News AI World — Mobil uygulama
Bu haberleri 45 dilde, anlık çeviriyle cebinde. Erken erişim için Gmail adresini bırak.
← Tüm haberlere dön