Musk’s X Denies Disinformation Claims Regarding Israel Violence

Musk’s X Denies Disinformation Claims Regarding Israel Violence

Elon Musk bought the platform, then known as⁣ Twitter, for $44 billion last year

AFP

Elon Musk’s social​ media platform X has defended ⁢itself against claims from the European Union that it⁣ is failing to‌ tackle disinformation around the​ violence in Israel and Gaza.

The firm’s CEO Linda Yaccarino wrote ​that the platform had “taken action to remove or label tens of⁢ thousands‍ of pieces of content” ​and removed hundreds of accounts linked to Gaza militant organisation Hamas, which attacked Israel on⁤ Saturday.

She addressed‍ the letter dated Wednesday to EU internal market ‌commissioner Thierry Breton, who had traded ⁣barbs ⁣with Musk on social media ‌on Tuesday after ⁣accusing‍ the⁤ platform⁢ of⁤ allowing⁤ “violent and terrorist⁢ content” to ​circulate.

Tesla and SpaceX boss Musk bought the platform, then known as Twitter, for ⁣$44 billion last year and sparked widespread alarm by gutting its staff, including content moderators, in a bid to save money.

Breton, the ⁢EU’s self-styled “digital enforcer”, ⁣demanded on Tuesday that Musk ‍and ⁣Mark Zuckerberg, whose Meta group includes Facebook​ and ⁢Instagram, provide details ⁢of how they ‌were tackling “illegal content and‌ disinformation”.

He⁤ warned that they⁢ needed to comply with‍ the Digital Service Act (DSA), which gives ‌the⁢ EU powers to fine platforms up​ to six⁤ percent of their global turnover if they fail to tackle illegal content.

Yaccarino’s letter, ⁤reposted by the ⁢CEO on her⁤ X account, ​said the firm had taken down posts that involved “violent speech, manipulated media ⁤and graphic ⁢media”.

Her letter hailed the importance of the ⁣”community notes” system, which allows users to correct⁣ or add context to each other’s messages.

Yaccarino wrote that more than 700 notes were added to posts in the‌ first four days after the ‌violence erupted in Israel, ‌and they were seen tens of millions⁣ of times.

The European Commission told AFP it had received the letter and was deciding ⁤on⁤ its next steps.

Musk’s leadership since the‌ renewed Israel violence has drawn‍ plenty of criticism, not just from the European Union.

Musk was forced to remove his ⁣own post ⁣recommending two accounts⁣ on ​X as reliable sources for Israel after many users pointed⁢ out they ⁤both ⁣had a history of spreading misinformation.

AFP factcheckers meanwhile ‍found⁤ several posts on ‌X, Facebook and TikTok promoting a fake White House document allocating $8 billion in military ‌assistance to Israel.

And several platforms have had users passing off material from other conflicts, or even from video games, as footage from Israel or Gaza.

The EU recently rated X as ⁢the worst of any ‍major⁤ platform ‌for illegal online ‍content, and Musk ⁤has pulled​ out of a voluntary ​EU code of practice ‌on battling disinformation.

Elon musk

2023-10-14 ‌00:24:02
Original from www.ibtimes.com

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