EU warns Elon Musk after Twitter found to have
highest rate of disinformation
Musk is told his platform, now known as X, must comply
with new laws designed to combat fake news and Russian propaganda
Lisa
O'Carroll in Brussels
@lisaocarroll
Tue 26 Sep
2023 13.26 CEST
The EU has
issued a warning to Elon Musk to comply with sweeping new laws on fake news and
Russian propaganda, after X – formerly known as Twitter – was found to have the
highest ratio of disinformation posts of all large social media platforms.
The report
analysed the ratio of disinformation for a new report laying bare for the first
time the scale of fake news on social media across the EU, with millions of
fake accounts removed by TikTok and LinkedIn.
Facebook
was the second worst offender, according to the first ever report recording
posts that will be deemed illegal across the EU under the Digital Services Act
(DSA), which came into force in August.
Nevertheless,
Facebook and other tech giants, including Google, TikTok and Microsoft, have
signed up to the code of practice the EU drew up to ensure they could get ready
in time to operate within the confines of the new laws.
Twitter
left the code of practice but it is obliged under the new law to comply with
the rules or face a ban across the EU.
“Mr Musk
knows he is not off the hook by leaving the code of practice,” said the
European commissioner Věra Jourová, who is responsible for the implementation
of the new anti-disinformation code.
“There are
obligations under the hard law. So my message for Twitter/X is you have to
comply. We will be watching what you do.”
“X, formerly Twitter … is the platform with the
largest ratio of mis/disinformation followed by Facebook,” she told reporters.
The
200-page report is an account of the work the large platforms have done in the
first six months of 2023 to prepare for compliance with the new law and lifts
the lid on the behind-the-scenes efforts made by Facebook and others to crack
down on Russian propaganda, hate speech and other disinformation.
“The
Russian state has engaged in the war of ideas to pollute our information space
with half truth and lies to create a false image that democracy is no better
than autocracy,” said Jourová.
LinkedIn’s
owner, Microsoft, stopped 6.7m fake accounts being created and removed 24,000
pieces of fake content
YouTube,
owned by Google, told the EU it had removed more than “400 channels involved in
coordinated influence operations linked to the Russian-state sponsored Internet
Research Agency”.
Tiktok
removed almost 6m fake accounts and 410 unverifiable adverts.
Google
removed advertising from almost 300 sites linked to “state-funded propaganda
sites” and rejected more than 140,000 political advertisers for “failing
identity verification processes”.
Meta, the
report says, expanded its fact-checking to 26 partners covering 22 languages in
the EU, now also including Czech and Slovak.
It reported
that 37% of users also cancelled sharing when notified of fake news, a sign the
EU says of the value consumers put on labelling disinformation.
The EU is
particularly concerned about continued Russian propaganda in social media
before key elections in Slovakia on Sunday and in Poland on 15 October.
TikTok,
which was recently fined €345m (£300m) for breaching data protection rules
concerning children, is also working to comply with the DSA.
The report
said that through this network it checked 832 videos related to the war in
Ukraine of which 211 were removed.
Microsoft,
another participant in the code of practice, told the EU it had either promoted
information or downgraded questionable information in relation to 800,000
search queries about the war in Ukraine.
Jourová
said the report was evidence that Russia was engaged in a “war of ideas” and
that Kremlin disinformation was still very prevalent across the large
platforms.
She said
the Kremlin had chosen Slovakia more than Poland as “fertile soil” for division
and interference with democracy.
She said
one of her main messages to the large platforms was to be aware of elections,
including those for the European parliament next year, and the “risk of
disinformation”.
She said
the Kremlin propaganda was “a multimillion-euro weapon of mass manipulation
aimed both internally at the Russians as well as Europeans and the rest of the
world. And we must address this. The very large platforms must address this
risk.”
The war in
Ukraine was the most frequent topic for propaganda but the platforms also
reported hate speech in relation to migration, LBGTQ+ communities and the
climate crisis.
“I think it
is one of the advantages of disinformation, is that they are so predictable,”
said Jourová, making it easier for factcheckers to find.
On Twitter,
she said “disinformation actors were found to have significantly more followers
than their non-disinformation counterparts and tend to have joined the platform
more recently than non-disinformation users”.
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