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UK MPs  call for social media regulation

The UK faces a “democratic crisis” with voters being targeted with “pernicious views” and data being manipulated, a parliamentary committee is set to warn.

The Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) Committee has been investigating disinformation and fake news following the Cambridge Analytica data scandal.

In its first Report, MPs will suggest Social Media companies should face tougher regulation or a new tax.

It also proposes measures to combat election interference.

The MPs’ report comes after months of investigating the impact of technology giants and how people are affected by the rise in fake news on social media.

It also probed whether Russia had a role in influencing voters in the EU referendum.

The committee’s report was due to be officially published on Sunday.

But a copy was leaked on Friday by Dominic Cummings, the director of the official Brexit campaign group Vote Leave, who published it on his own blog.

Mr Cummings was asked and officially summoned to take part in the inquiry – to respond to allegations made against the Vote Leave campaign – but he refused. Mr Cummings called the report “fake news”.

According to the leaked report, MPs say “our democracy is at risk and now is the time to act”.

The committee highlights the “relentless targeting of hyper-partisan views, which play to the fears and prejudices of people, in order to influence their voting plans”, which the MPs say is a threat to democracy.

The report, when it is published officially, is expected to be very critical of Facebook, which has been under increased scrutiny following the Cambridge Analytica data scandal.

“Facebook has hampered our efforts to get information about their company throughout this inquiry. It is as if it thinks that the problem will go away if it does not share information about the problem, and reacts only when it is pressed,” it will say.

“It provided witnesses who have been unwilling or unable to give full answers to the committee’s questions.”

And the report will repeat its call for Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg to give evidence.

The committee said they were unsatisfied with evidence by Mr Zuckerberg’s chief technology officer

The committee’s report will also say it had received “disturbing evidence” – some of which it had not published – of hacking, disinformation and voter suppression in elections since 2010.

“We urge the government to ensure that the National Crime Agency thoroughly investigates these allegations.”

What will the committee recommend?

Social media sites should be held responsible for ‘harmful’ content on their services

Companies such as Facebook and YouTube have repeatedly said they are just a “platform”, rather than a “publisher”. They have argued that they are not responsible for the content people post on their services.

The committee’s report is expected to say “social media companies cannot hide behind the claim of being merely a ‘platform'”.

A “new category of tech company” should be created which is “not necessarily a platform or a publisher” but something in between, the committee will suggest,

This should establish “clear legal liability for the tech companies to act against harmful and illegal content on their platforms”.

The rules on political campaigns should be made fit for the digital age

The committee will say that electoral law needs to be “updated to reflect changes in campaigning techniques”.

Vote Leave’s Facebook advertisements have been released

It will suggest:

  • creating a public register for political advertising so that anybody can see what messages are being distributed
  • online political advertisements should have a digital imprint stating who was responsible, as is required with printed leaflets and advertisements
  • social media sites should be held responsible for interference in elections by malicious actors
  • electoral fraud fines should be increased from a maximum of £20,000 to a percentage of an organisations’ annual turnover

Social network security should be audited

The report will suggest that an independent body such as the Competition and Markets Authority should audit the social networks.

It will say that security mechanisms and algorithms used by social networks should be available for audit by a government regulator, to ensure they are “operating responsibly”.

The committee will also warn that fake accounts on sites such as Facebook and Twitter “not only damage the user experience, but potentially defraud advertisers” who could be paying to advertise to accounts not run by real people.

Fake followers defraud advertisers, the committee said

Technology companies should be taxed to fund education and regulation

Increased regulation of Social Media Sites would result in more work for organisations such as the Electoral Commission and Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO).

The committee will suggest a levy on tech companies should fund the expanded responsibilities of the regulators.

The money should also be spent on educational programmes and a public information campaign, to help people identify disinformation and fake news.

The report will also summarise the evidence collected during the committee’s inquiry, which was launched in September last year.

Whistleblower Christopher Wylie and Cambridge Analytica chief executive Alexander Nix were among the 61 witnesses that gave evidence.

Whistleblower Christopher Wylie exposed data misuse

Tom Baldwin, who has written a book on the relationship between politics and media, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the report’s recommendations did not go far enough.

“The social media ads that were seen used by Donald Trump and the Leave campaign are the most lethal political weapons ever invented,” Mr Baldwin said.

Will Moy, the head of fact checking charity Full Fact, told the BBC that the same conversation about fake news is going on around the world – and the reaction of some governments had been “quite scary”.

He said MPs should acknowledge that it is important to also “stand proudly on being an open society and valuing free speech”.

There have always been rules on political advertising, he said, but these rules have become out of date because they do not work online.

The transparency of where adverts come from should be available immediately, he said.

The committee’s final report is expected before the end of the year.

Facebook and Twitter have yet to respond to a request for comment.

Source: BBC

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