terça-feira, 7 de janeiro de 2025

Pressure mounts on EU to use legal weapons against Musk’s interference

 



Pressure mounts on EU to use legal weapons against Musk’s interference

 

European Commission says it will study whether X gives unfair boost to far right in German election.

 

January 7, 2025 4:20 am CET

By Pieter Haeck and Nicholas Vinocur

https://www.politico.eu/article/elon-musk-interference-alice-weidel-x-livestream-afd-germany-eu-digital-services-act/

 

What are you waiting for, Brussels?

 

Elon Musk’s decision to host German far-right leader Alice Weidel in a livestream on X is sparking fury from European Union leaders and lawmakers, who on Monday urged Brussels to deploy its full legal might to rein in the billionaire tech magnate.

 

In response, the European Commission said the SpaceX founder and senior member of the incoming Trump administration could indeed land in legal hot water under the terms of the EU’s new digital rulebook, depending on the extent to which the Thursday livestream is deemed to boost Weidel unfairly over rivals ahead of Germany’s Feb. 23 election.

 

Across Europe, teaming up with Weidel is seen as an inflammatory step as members of her populist and anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party have for years been accused of whitewashing and trivializing Nazi crimes. The AfD is currently polling second.

 

French President Emmanuel Macron was quick to accuse Musk of having gone too far in his vocal support for the AfD. “Ten years ago, who could have imagined it if we had been told that the owner of one of the largest social networks in the world would support a new international reactionary movement and intervene directly in elections, including in Germany,” he said in a speech at the Elysée Palace.

 

The pressure is now on the European Commission to respond, given that it is in charge of enforcing Europe’s Digital Services Act, which polices social media platforms including X, and threatens eye-watering fines of up to 6 percent of global turnover, or even temporary blocks, in case of a breach.

 

Unfair advantage

The key problem that Musk would face legally under the DSA concerns not so much content as the extent to which exposure on a platform as large as X would give the AfD an unfair public advantage over its rivals before a vote.

 

Former EU digital enforcer Thierry Breton said Saturday that Weidel will be offered a “significant and valuable advantage” over her competitors and reminded Musk to adhere to his EU social media law obligations.

 

German Greens MEP Alexandra Geese defined the problem as follows: “Elon Musk chatting with AfD leader Alice Weidel on X is covered by freedom of expression. His algorithmic manipulation, [which] is intentionally flooding German X timelines with far-right propaganda and drowning out progressive content, is not.”

 

When confronted by such questions as to whether Musk could improperly boost Weidel’s political agenda with Thursday’s livestream, Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier said there was a special burden on very large platforms regarding presenting content that posed “risks for electoral processes.”

 

“'How much is [it] or will it be boosted?' This is what the Commission will be looking at,” he said, noting that Brussels had already been studying X’s compliance with the DSA for more than a year.

 

Regnier added that the Commission, German regulators and X would meet for a roundtable discussion Jan. 24 to discuss risks related to the February election.

 

Brussels has already had its fair share of run-ins with Musk. Breton himself notoriously received a meme from Musk instructing him to “f*** your own face.”

 

Political will

Pursuing legal action against a major tech tycoon would be tricky enough, but the EU's headaches are exacerbated by the fact that in 13 days’ time, Musk will become part of the United States administration as head of the Department of Government Efficiency.

 

“Musk must be seen as representing the U.S. president when he bets against the leadership of key European nations, allies until now,” former member of the European Parliament and Stanford University fellow Marietje Schaake wrote in an email.

 

Quite simply, by threatening probes or even a fine, the EU now risks a major confrontation with the Washington administration.

 

“Whether the EU Commission chooses to act will depend on a combination of technical evidence and political will,” said Felix Kartte, a senior fellow at Germany’s Mercator Foundation. “The question is essentially whether EU leaders are prepared to choose confrontation with the Trump administration before it has formally taken office.”

 

Despite the political dimension, Kartte argued there could still be a case for Musk to answer.

 

“If Musk’s engineered prominence generates public risks, such as amplifying illegal hate speech or undermining media pluralism, regulators could argue that X is failing its risk mitigation obligations under the DSA,” he said.

 

In the European Parliament, some are also pushing Brussels to check whether Musk’s actions are legal under the DSA.

 

In a question addressed to the Commission’s tech czar, Henna Virkkunen, German European lawmaker Damian Boeselager raised concerns about Musk’s possible use of a multiplier for his content, which would mean “he undermined the neutrality of the algorithm for the benefit of his own reach.”

 

“What I’m trying to find out is if Musk is using a large information platform that he owns in ways which could diminish the freedom of speech of others, by hard-coding a multiplier into his own reach,” he clarified in remarks shared with POLITICO.

 

Other lawmakers have expressed their concerns about Musk’s use of X to supercharge his own visibility, urging Brussels to investigate.

 

The burden of enforcing the DSA now falls to Virkkunen, who took over from Breton after his resignation last summer. Breton had faced pushback from his colleagues inside the EU executive after addressing a letter to Musk warning him of potential consequences for boosting certain parties or figures.

 

Breton may have left Brussels, but he hasn’t gone quiet about Musk.

 

On the contrary, he has once again warned both Weidel and Musk about their upcoming livestream, urging his platform to “fully respect all its obligations under our EU law.”

Why Musk's whims could stop him supporting Germany's far-right AfD party...

Is Elon Musk right to attack Nigel Farage? | The Daily T Podcast

21 hours ago: Elon Musk and Nigel Farage Clash Over Tommy Robinson

Elon Musk loves to provoke – and Nigel Farage is his latest victim

 


Elon Musk loves to provoke – and Nigel Farage is his latest victim

Zoe Williams

The world’s richest man won’t be satisfied until all the politicians in his pocket have submitted to his dictatorial whims

 

Mon 6 Jan 2025 17.41 GMT

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/jan/06/elon-musk-loves-to-provoke-and-nigel-farage-is-his-latest-victim

 

In fiction, when a billionaire supervillain mobilises himself and his nefarious army of dollars against British democracy, we send a secret agent to have a word or two. That arm of the state is apparently inoperative, and I don’t know who to blame for that, probably austerity.

 

Instead, our first line of defence against Elon Musk has turned out to be Nigel Farage. Who could possibly have foreseen that they’d fall out, and so soon? They’re both so reasonable and conciliatory.

 

It seems like only a nanosecond ago that Musk was offering to hose Farage with cash; to give him so much money to spend on stunts and Facebook ads that our next general election would be a mere formality. All Farage had to do was fall in line on the simple matter of whether Tommy Robinson was a folk hero or far-right thug, and Westminster would be his for the taking.

 

You couldn’t call Farage’s response a principled stand: what he actually told Reform’s East Midlands conference was that Musk had “a whole range of opinions, some of which I agree with very strongly, and others of which I am more reticent about”. As critique goes, it’s weak; but as support goes, it’s pretty weak as well, given that it could mean anything. Does Farage agree very strongly that you should name your children with Roman numerals, as Musk has, but feel reticent on the matter of driverless cars? Does he agree with Musk’s long-game of colonising Mars, but feel reticent about the existence of a woke mind virus? What use is reticence to anyone in the context of Musk, whose entire persona is built on provocation, and demands either support or opposition; a man who spent $44bn on a social media platform apparently aiming to radicalise others, but mainly just radicalised himself? Even if there were some mysterious third way, where you could meet inflammatory and mendacious rhetoric with a tactful silence, would that somehow help? Does Farage have any skills or experience in the reticence area?

 

It’s been infuriating to watch commentators on the right explain how this was good for Nigel Farage, actually, enabling him to stand proud against Robinson (real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon), when in fact what he performed was more of a wheedling stoop, as if hoping against hope that the cash would spill out of Musk’s back pocket anyway.

 

And yet, just from a surfeit of human kindness, I feel like offering Farage some consolation: he could have fallen in line over Tommy Robinson, he could have signed up to Musk’s other tweet-proposition that Jess Phillips is a “rape genocide apologist”, and Musk would have found something more unhinged to say about British politics. Never mind that Musk is unconstrained in these pronouncements by reality or evidence; it’s all about the spectacle. Musk’s opinion-giving is dictatorial in its purest sense; he dares his acolytes to refute him, the better to flex his power over them. He wants to replace their observed reality with his own, and it has to be in public. He won’t be satisfied – and this goes for every politician he has in his pocket, up to and including the new US president – until he’s forced them to resile from their core positions while the world watches. This is why he picked a fight with Maga over visas before the inauguration was even cold, when reducing immigration was at the core of their offer. It’s chilling to witness, even if you have no time, let alone love, for its object, and don’t care to parse the fine differences of their dog-whistle politics. I’m not even looking forward to the bit where he gets Trump to surrender on the subject of high-skilled immigration. Nobody likes a sadist.

 

I was, on the other hand, medium-eagerly anticipating the moment when the prime minister found an appropriate response to the ongoing slander by the billionaire that Labour has somehow been complicit in, indeed orchestrated a cover-up of child sexual abuse in Rotherham, in the 00s and 10s. Starmer’s words, that the man was “spreading misinformation and lies”, were stronger than many expected, but a bit of an anticlimax. I’d have liked more in the space of “things we didn’t already know”; but how do you match the unhinged energy? Democratic politics, whatever its hue, has yet to find the language to deal with a man like Elon Musk, a man to whom maybe no words will ever speak as loudly as money. The answer’s probably pretty simple: tax him till his pips stop squeaking.

 

 Zoe Williams is a Guardian columnist

Elon Musk creates chaos for Trump with Farage blunder

How Elon Musk Has Planted Himself Almost Literally at Trump’s Doorstep

 



How Elon Musk Has Planted Himself Almost Literally at Trump’s Doorstep

 

For much of the period since Election Day, the billionaire has been staying at a $2,000-a-night cottage at Mar-a-Lago, giving him easy access to the president-elect.

 

Maggie Haberman Jonathan Swan Ryan Mac

By Maggie HabermanJonathan Swan and Ryan Mac

Dec. 30, 2024, 3:10 p.m. ET

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/30/us/politics/elon-musk-trump-mar-a-lago.html

 

Elon Musk plays many roles with President-elect Donald J. Trump. He is Mr. Trump’s most important donor, most influential social media promoter and a key adviser on policy and personnel.

 

For most of the time since Election Day, he has also been Mr. Trump’s tenant.

 

Mr. Musk has been using one of the cottages available for rent on Mr. Trump’s property at Mar-a-Lago, the former Marjorie Merriweather Post home in Florida that Mr. Trump converted into a members-only club and hotel in the 1990s, according to two people with knowledge of the arrangement. The cottage where he has been staying, named Banyan, is several hundred feet away from the main house, according to a person who knows the property.

 

Staying right on the grounds has helped provide Mr. Musk with easy access to Mr. Trump.

 

He can drop in on Mr. Trump’s dinners, such as one he had recently with Mr. Musk’s rival, the Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

 

Mr. Musk, who spent more than a quarter of a billion dollars in the final months of this year’s election cycle to help elect Mr. Trump, has attended personnel meetings in the Mar-a-Lago Teahouse, sat in on phone calls with foreign leaders and spent hours with Mr. Trump in his office. Mr. Musk’s employees from his various businesses have also been integrally involved in the transition, vetting prospective candidates for senior administration jobs, in interviews at the Trump transition headquarters in West Palm Beach.

 

Mr. Musk is not the only member of the president-elect’s inner circle who has been bunking on Mr. Trump’s property. Vice President-elect JD Vance has stayed in one of the cottages at Mar-a-Lago when he has been in Palm Beach and has been there frequently during the transition, according to a person with knowledge of his stays. And others are said to have used cottages since Election Day. But few have been as omnipresent as Mr. Musk.

 

The cottage being used by Mr. Musk has been used over the years by many friends and associates of Mr. Trump.

 

Years ago, former Speaker John Boehner stayed at Banyan with a friend, before Mr. Trump became a presidential candidate.

 

Mr. Trump has bragged to people that Mr. Musk — the world’s richest man — is “renting” one of the residential spaces at Mar-a-Lago. It is unclear how much Mr. Musk will ultimately end up paying for the cottage, which historically has rented for at least $2,000 a night, according to a person with knowledge of the fees.

 

Officials at the club do not typically bill guests until the end of their stay, leaving open the possibility that Mr. Trump will choose not to charge Mr. Musk, or to reduce the size of his bill. But Mr. Trump is not known to shy away from income opportunities.

 

Mr. Musk moved into the cottage around Election Day and watched the returns at Mar-a-Lago with Mr. Trump. He left the property around Christmas and has been expected to return in the coming days.

 

Mr. Musk is known around the club to make requests like meals outside the normal kitchen hours. While staying at Mar-a-Lago, he has been accompanied by at least two of his children — Mr. Musk has at least 11 — and their nannies.

 

One of the mothers of his children, Shivon Zilis, who worked for Mr. Musk at his brain implant company Neuralink, has also been photographed at Mar-a-Lago, after the election.

 

Mr. Musk travels frequently and is known to stay at properties owned by his friends. In San Francisco, he has been known to stay at the home of David Sacks, the venture capitalist whom Mr. Trump nominated recently to be an adviser on cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence. While in Hawaii, he has resided at places owned by the billionaire Larry Ellison on the island of Lanai.

 

Mar-a-Lago is different, however, in being a for-profit enterprise owned by Mr. Trump rather than a private home.

 

A spokesman for the Trump transition did not respond to an email seeking comment about the arrangement. Mr. Musk did not respond to an email request for comment.

 

On Friday, in a post on Truth Social that seemed intended as a private communication to Mr. Musk, Mr. Trump wrote: “Where are you? When are you coming to the ‘Center of the Universe,’ Mar-a-Lago. Bill Gates asked to come, tonight. We miss you and x! New Year’s Eve is going to be AMAZING!!! DJT.”

 

Some of Mr. Trump’s advisers have privately griped about how much influence Mr. Musk has had on the transition and how inseparable he is from the president-elect.

 

Mr. Musk is unlikely to have such unfettered physical access to Mr. Trump after the president-elect is sworn in on Jan. 20 in Washington. Coming and going in the West Wing is more onerous than at Mr. Trump’s private clubs, as is access to the White House residence.

 

Still, Mr. Trump has often liked to collect people, and has enjoyed knowing that many of them pay for access to him. Since he first took office, people seeking to curry favor with him — or to get face time with him — have joined his clubs, rented ballrooms at his properties or stayed in his hotels.

 

Mr. Trump is said to have increased the annual membership fee at Mar-a-Lago to $1 million.

 

Maggie Haberman is a senior political correspondent reporting on the 2024 presidential campaign, down ballot races across the country and the investigations into former President Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie Haberman

 

Jonathan Swan is a political reporter covering the 2024 presidential election and Donald Trump’s campaign. More about Jonathan Swan

 

Ryan Mac covers corporate accountability across the global technology industry. More about Ryan Mac