Friday, November 15, 2024

Did the European Union Just Try to Illegally Censor US Free Speech? – Watts Up With That?

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Essay by Eric Worrall

A war of words has erupted between the EU and Elon Musk, over alleged EU attempts to blackmail X into secretly censoring free speech.

Elon Musk claims EU offered an ‘illegal secret deal’ as X charged with DSA breaches

David Walsh
Sat 13 July 2024 at 4:37 AM AEST

Elon Musk has hit out at the European Commission, claiming it tried to make an “illegal secret deal” with X over compliance with new EU rules to prevent online misinformation.

It comes as the Commission announced on Friday that Musk’s social media platform, formerly known as Twitter, had breached elements of the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA).

“The European Commission offered X an illegal secret deal: if we quietly censored speech without telling anyone, they would not fine us,” the billionaire tech mogul posted on X.

Read more: https://au.news.yahoo.com/elon-musk-claims-eu-offered-183729735.html

Some more information on the DSA accusation against Musk;

EU accuses Elon Musk’s X of misleading users

By Olesya Dmitracova, CNN
Updated 7:04 AM EDT, Fri July 12, 2024

LondonCNN — 

“Today we issue, for the first time, preliminary findings under the Digital Services Act,” Margrethe Vestager, a senior official at the European Commission, said in a statementFriday. “In our view, X does not comply with the DSA in key transparency areas, by using dark patterns and thus misleading users, by failing to provide an adequate ad repository, and by blocking access to data for researchers.”

The company’s approach to so-called verified accounts “does not correspond to industry practice and deceives users,” the European Union’s executive arm added in the statement. Anyone can subscribe to obtain the “verified” status, it noted, and pointed to evidence of “malicious actors” abusing the blue check “to deceive users.”

If the Commission’s preliminary findings are confirmed, it could impose a fine on X of up to 6% of its global annual turnover.

Read more: https://edition.cnn.com/2024/07/12/tech/x-breaching-eu-rules-musk/index.html

The EU press release;

18 December 2023 Brussels 

Commission opens formal proceedings against X under the Digital Services Act

The European Commission has opened formal proceedings to assess whether X may have breached the Digital Services Act (DSA) in areas linked to risk management, content moderation, dark patterns, advertising transparency and data access for researchers.

On the basis of the preliminary investigation conducted so far, including on the basis of an analysis of the risk assessment report submitted by X in September, X’s Transparency report published on 3 November, and X’s replies to a formal request for information, which, among others, concerned the dissemination of illegal content in the context of Hamas’ terrorist attacks against Israel, the Commission has decided to open formal infringement proceedings against X under the Digital Services Act.

The proceedings will focus on the following areas:

  • The compliance with the DSA obligations related to countering the dissemination of illegal content in the EU, notably in relation to the risk assessment and mitigation measures adopted by X to counter the dissemination of illegal content in the EU, as well as the functioning of the notice and action mechanism for illegal content in the EU mandated by the DSA, including in light of X’s content moderation resources.
  • The effectiveness of measures taken to combat information manipulation on the platform, notably the effectiveness of X’s so-called ‘Community Notes’ system in the EU and the effectiveness of related policies mitigating risks to civic discourse and electoral processes.
  • The measures taken by X to increase the transparency of its platform. The investigation concerns suspected shortcomings in giving researchers access to X’s publicly accessible data as mandated by Article 40 of the DSA, as well as shortcomings in X’s ads repository.
  • A suspected deceptive design of the user interface, notably in relation to checkmarks linked to certain subscription products, the so-called Blue checks.

If proven, these failures would constitute infringements of Articles 34(1), 34(2) and 35(1), 16(5) and 16(6), 25(1), 39 and 40(12) of the DSA. The Commission will now carry out an in-depth investigation as a matter of priority. The opening of formal infringement proceedings does not prejudge its outcome.

These are the first formal proceedings launched by the Commission to enforce the first EU-wide horizontal framework for online platforms’ responsibility, just 3 years from its proposal.

Next Steps

After the formal opening of proceedings, the Commission will continue to gather evidence, for example by sending additional requests for information, conducting interviews or inspections.

The opening of formal proceedings empowers the Commission to take further enforcement steps, such as interim measures, and non-compliance decisions. The Commission is also empowered to accept any commitment made by X to remedy on the matters subject to the proceeding.

The DSA does not set any legal deadline for bringing formal proceedings to an end. The duration of an in-depth investigation depends on a number of factors, including the complexity of the case, the extent to which the company concerned cooperate with the Commission and the exercise of the rights of defence.

The opening of formal infringement proceedings does not prejudge its outcome. It relieves Digital Services Coordinators, or any other competent authority of EU Member States, of their powers to supervise and enforce the DSA in relation to the suspected infringements of Articles 16(5), 16(6) and 25(1).

Background

X (formerly known as Twitter) has been designated as a Very Large Online Platform (VLOP) on 25 April 2023 under the EU’s Digital Services Act, following its declaration of having 112 million monthly active users in the EU as reported to the Commission on 17 February 2023.

As a VLOP, since four months from its designation, X has had to comply with a series of obligations set out in the DSA. In particular:

  • Pursuant to Articles 34(1), 34(2) and 35(1), VLOPs are obliged to diligently identify, analyse, and assess any systemic risks in the Union stemming from the design or functioning of their service and its related systems, or from the use made of their services. When conducting risk assessments, VLOPs shall take into account a number of factors that influence the systemic risks, including recommender systems, advertising systems or the intentional manipulation of the service, including through inauthentic use or automated exploitation of the service, as well as the amplification and potentially rapid and wide dissemination of illegal content and of information that is incompatible with their terms and conditions. VLOPs are obliged to put in place reasonable, proportionate and effective mitigation measures, tailored to the specific systemic risks identified.
  • Pursuant to Articles 16(5) and 16(6), online platforms have to notify without undue delay individuals or entities of content moderation decision, providing information on the possibilities for redress in respect of that decision; platforms shall take such decisions in a timely, diligent, non-arbitrary and objective manner.
  • Pursuant to Article 25(1), online platforms shall not design, organise or operate their online interfaces in a way that deceives or manipulates their users or in a way that otherwise materially distorts or impairs the ability of the users of their service to make free and informed decisions.
  • Pursuant to Article 39, VLOPs have to compile and make publicly available through a searchable and reliable tool a repository containing advertisements on their platforms, until one year after the advertisement was presented for the last time, in a way that the information is accurate and complete.
  • Pursuant to Article 40(12), VLOPs have to provide researchers with effective access to platform data.

More information on this investigation will be available on the Commission’s website.

For More Information 

EU Official Journal text on the DSA 

Very large online platforms and search engines under the DSA 

The enforcement framework under the Digital Services Act

Digital Services Act – Questions and Answers

Quote(s)

The higher the risk large platforms pose to our society, the more specific the requirements of the Digital Services Act are. We take any breach of our rules very seriously. And the evidence we currently have is enough to formally open a proceeding against X. The Commission will carefully investigate X’s compliance with the DSA, to ensure European citizens are safeguarded online – as the regulation mandates.

Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President for a Europe Fit for the Digital Age 

Today’s opening of formal proceedings against X makes it clear that, with the DSA, the time of big online platforms behaving like they are “too big to care” has come to an end. We now have clear rules, ex ante obligations, strong oversight, speedy enforcement, and deterrent sanctions and we will make full use of our toolbox to protect our citizens and democracies. We will now start an in-depth investigation of X’s compliance with the DSA obligations concerning countering the dissemination and amplification of illegal content and disinformation in the EU, transparency of the platforms and design of the user interface.

Thierry Breton, Commissioner for Internal Market

Related topics

Digital Economy and Society
Europe Fit for Digital Age

Contacts for media

Johannes BAHRKE

Phone
+32 2 295 86 15

Mail
johannes.bahrke@ec.europa.eu 

Thomas Regnier
Phone
+32 2 29 9 1099

Mail
thomas.regnier@ec.europa.eu 

If you do not work for a media organisation, you are welcome to contact the EU through Europe Direct in writing or by calling 00 800 6 7 8 9 10 11.

Read more: https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_23_6709

How could the USA be caught in this alleged censorship blackmail attempt?

Even if Elon Musk attempts to ring fence X.com content in Europe, and apply European censorship laws only to users in Europe, it would be impossible to prevent breaches. Lots of companies and ordinary people use VPNs, virtual private networks, which among other things disguise the true geographic origin of people accessing the internet. X.com would likely be held accountable for breaches which are beyond its power to prevent.

Perhaps the EU DSA law was designed to make compliance impossible? Musk’s blackmail accusation certainly raises this possibility. The EU cannot openly demand global content be censored, but by passing a law which is impossible to obey, then threatening enormous fines for non-compliance, they could put every social media or news provider into the position of a perpetrator who has to cut a deal with the authorities to save their skin.

If the USA had a president who cared about free speech, the USA could push back against this outrageous alleged attack on US freedom.

But President Biden appears to want censorship just as much as the EU, though thankfully Biden’s effort to inflict censorship on the American people was just as incompetent as most of his administration’s other policy initiatives. The US censorship push collapsed into ridicule, after Biden’s new disinformation commissioner turned out to be an amateur comedian.

I doubt there will be a similar happy ending for the EU censorship push.

In 2006 Farage made a memorable speech, in which Farage pointed out some members of the European Commission, the premier executive body of the European Union, had convictions for corruption, embezzlement or close ties to former Soviet tyrants.

The quote which comes to mind the whenever I watch Farage’s speech is “You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villany“. All mainstream British political parties, including the British Conservatives, voted to ratify the EU commission Farage was describing. The “sacked auditor” Farage referenced in his speech was EU auditor Marta Andreasen, who was fired after exposing that billions of dollars of EU funds were vulnerable to embezzlement thanks to inadequate EU management and oversight systems.

This is the institution which is seeking to prosecute Musk for breaching their digital controls, which wants us to accept their moral and legal authority to control what we are allowed to read, see and hear. This is the institution which Musk claims attempted to blackmail him into secret censorship.

I believe we all owe Musk a vote of thanks for once again standing up to the forces of global censorship. The fact that none of Musk’s peers in the social media industry have stood by his side, in my opinion shows how close we are to losing some of our most precious freedoms.



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