EU Raises Concerns Over Musk’s X Spreading ‘Unauthorized’ Disinformation Following Hamas Attack

EU Raises Concerns Over Musk’s X Spreading ‘Unauthorized’ Disinformation Following Hamas Attack

An EU official said in ‌a​ letter that concerns over X’s ​moderation ⁣practices⁤ have heightened after⁣ the Hamas attack against Israel
AFP

The EU’s digital ⁢chief Thierry Breton warned ⁣Elon Musk on Tuesday that his platform X,⁤ formerly Twitter, is spreading “illegal content and disinformation”, in a letter seen by AFP.

The⁢ letter ⁣said concerns had heightened after the ⁢Hamas attack against Israel, ​and⁣ demanded Musk respond ⁣to ⁤the complaint within 24 hours and contact “relevant law enforcement authorities”.

As the European Union’s commissioner ​for industry and the digital ⁤economy, Breton‌ is charged with regulating internet giants that trade within the bloc, and can ⁢launch legal action.

“Following⁢ the terrorist attacks​ carried out by Hamas against ‍Israel, we have indications that ‌your platform ‍is being ‌used to ⁤disseminate ⁣illegal content and disinformation‍ in the EU,” Breton wrote.

Breton reminded Musk that⁤ EU law‌ sets tough rules ‍on moderating content, “especially when it comes to violent and terrorist content that appears to circulate⁢ on​ your platform”.

He asked that⁢ X ‌respond to his complaint within 24 hours and also get in​ touch with Europol, the EU police coordinating agency.

“We will ​include your​ answer in ⁣our assessment file on your compliance with the ‌DSA,” ‍Breton⁣ said, referring to the new EU Digital ​Services Act, which regulates online platforms.

“I remind you ​that following the opening of a potential ​investigation and a ⁣finding of non-compliance, ⁣penalties can be imposed,” it ⁢said.

Musk, responding later ⁣on X to a user who ‍had posted the letter, invited Breton‍ to “please ⁢list the violations you allude to”.

“Our policy is that everything is open source and transparent, an approach that I know the EU supports,” Musk wrote.

Brussels has previously complained‍ that, among the large-scale internet⁤ platforms that fall under the DSA remit, Musk’s Twitter now rebranded X ⁣spreads the⁤ biggest proportion of disinformation.

In August, when the new law⁣ came into effect, Musk replied to a post by Breton promising‌ that the platform⁤ was “working hard”​ to comply, but there have ‍been⁤ more warning signs.

While the ⁢rules were still voluntary, ​the firm pulled ​out‌ of an oversight group, ⁣and Musk ⁢– a self-styled “free ⁣speech‌ absolutist” ‍– ⁤has been dismissive of ‍criticism ‍in​ his personal posts.

In September, the billionaire tech mogul boasted that he had cut half of its⁣ global team dedicated to ⁣monitoring and⁣ limiting disinformation and fraud around major‌ elections.

Since Saturday’s shock attack on Israeli communities by the Hamas militant group, web platforms have​ been swamped by posts containing‌ fake or misrepresented reports⁣ and footage.

While the confirmed death toll in ⁢the renewed war has now passed‌ 3,000 — unconfirmed, exaggerated or‌ false reports of atrocities have also proliferated.

Experts fear these moves have increased the risk of misinformation⁢ provoking ⁢real-world harm, amplifying hate and⁣ violence.

Elon musk

2023-10-11 07:48:02
Original ‌from ‌ www.ibtimes.com

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