The Prague Post - Tech firms roll back misinformation curbs ahead of 2024 polls

EUR -
AED 4.288554
AFN 73.568184
ALL 95.580238
AMD 433.45531
ANG 2.090132
AOA 1071.991923
ARS 1624.321643
AUD 1.637724
AWG 2.104863
AZN 1.98321
BAM 1.951099
BBD 2.352732
BDT 143.324696
BGN 1.94792
BHD 0.441018
BIF 3475.213926
BMD 1.167747
BND 1.4916
BOB 8.071554
BRL 5.833477
BSD 1.168086
BTN 110.734214
BWP 15.788893
BYN 3.289176
BYR 22887.833654
BZD 2.34934
CAD 1.596502
CDF 2709.172203
CHF 0.921568
CLF 0.026851
CLP 1056.775445
CNY 7.985343
CNH 7.982395
COP 4245.471271
CRC 531.220162
CUC 1.167747
CUP 30.945285
CVE 110.789957
CZK 24.372002
DJF 207.531631
DKK 7.472388
DOP 69.334923
DZD 154.907395
EGP 62.662687
ERN 17.516199
ETB 183.336178
FJD 2.575056
FKP 0.864274
GBP 0.866018
GEL 3.141144
GGP 0.864274
GHS 13.066953
GIP 0.864274
GMD 85.245391
GNF 10246.976786
GTQ 8.924461
GYD 244.390158
HKD 9.149371
HNL 31.073526
HRK 7.531617
HTG 152.991407
HUF 365.957197
IDR 20245.456613
ILS 3.472469
IMP 0.864274
INR 111.218638
IQD 1529.748066
IRR 1536170.671984
ISK 143.807421
JEP 0.864274
JMD 183.168702
JOD 0.827956
JPY 186.218232
KES 150.875035
KGS 102.095273
KHR 4682.664564
KMF 492.788717
KPW 1050.933028
KRW 1729.29845
KWD 0.359596
KYD 0.973451
KZT 541.046488
LAK 25661.23158
LBP 104551.347351
LKR 373.210844
LRD 214.719465
LSL 19.699841
LTL 3.448053
LVL 0.706358
LYD 7.415615
MAD 10.817713
MDL 20.109465
MGA 4846.148324
MKD 61.593131
MMK 2452.244055
MNT 4179.232211
MOP 9.429582
MRU 46.686119
MUR 54.918858
MVR 18.047462
MWK 2033.632023
MXN 20.478831
MYR 4.637703
MZN 74.624824
NAD 19.699759
NGN 1603.047424
NIO 42.867826
NOK 10.930578
NPR 177.174385
NZD 2.000163
OMR 0.44899
PAB 1.168086
PEN 4.115086
PGK 5.068285
PHP 71.786056
PKR 325.655314
PLN 4.25827
PYG 7267.490851
QAR 4.254684
RON 5.133757
RSD 117.353835
RUB 87.497572
RWF 1706.077804
SAR 4.379575
SBD 9.387328
SCR 16.000802
SDG 701.233075
SEK 10.857942
SGD 1.493419
SHP 0.871841
SLE 28.723683
SLL 24487.058166
SOS 667.370304
SRD 43.744994
STD 24169.997259
STN 24.756228
SVC 10.221374
SYP 129.310537
SZL 19.676076
THB 38.128677
TJS 10.951069
TMT 4.092952
TND 3.377415
TOP 2.811654
TRY 52.764491
TTD 7.942864
TWD 36.982754
TZS 3030.302799
UAH 51.485958
UGX 4351.516141
USD 1.167747
UYU 46.487999
UZS 14071.347195
VES 567.043457
VND 30777.129784
VUV 138.2287
WST 3.171455
XAF 654.377644
XAG 0.015925
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.155894
XCG 2.105228
XDR 0.814758
XOF 652.770318
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.653514
ZAR 19.636979
ZMK 10511.123025
ZMW 22.047881
ZWL 376.013934
  • RBGPF

    0.2800

    63.75

    +0.44%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.82

    -0.04%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    185.2

    -0.8%

  • RIO

    -2.0000

    96.49

    -2.07%

  • GSK

    -3.0700

    51.4

    -5.97%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.26

    -1.03%

  • BP

    0.4500

    46.8

    +0.96%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.06

    -0.61%

  • BTI

    -1.0200

    57.45

    -1.78%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    14.9

    -2.68%

  • NGG

    -1.4700

    85.98

    -1.71%

  • BCC

    -3.6100

    79

    -4.57%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    35.8

    -0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.74

    -0.55%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    15.34

    -0.98%

Tech firms roll back misinformation curbs ahead of 2024 polls
Tech firms roll back misinformation curbs ahead of 2024 polls / Photo: Olivier DOULIERY - AFP/File

Tech firms roll back misinformation curbs ahead of 2024 polls

As a global election season widely expected to be mired in misinformation and falsehoods fast approaches, the big US-based tech platforms are walking back policies meant to curb them, stoking alarm.

Text size:

Whether it is YouTube scrapping a key misinformation policy or Facebook altering fact checking controls, the social media giants are demonstrating a certain lassitude with being the sheriffs of the internet Wild West.

The changes have come in a climate of layoffs, cost-cutting measures and pressure from right-wing groups that accuse the likes of Facebook-parent Meta or YouTube owner Google of suppressing free speech.

This has spurred tech companies to loosen content moderation policies, downsize trust and safety teams and, in the case of Elon Musk-owned X (formerly Twitter), restore accounts known for pushing bogus conspiracies.

Those moves, researchers say, have eroded their ability to tackle what is expected to be a deluge of misinformation during more than 50 major elections around the world next year, not only in the United States, but also in India, Africa and the European Union.

"Social media companies aren't ready for the 2024 election tsunami," the watchdog Global Coalition for Tech Justice said in a report this month.

"While they continue to count their profits, our democracies are left vulnerable to violent coup attempts, venomous hate speech, and election interference."

In June, YouTube said it will stop removing content that falsely claims the 2020 US presidential election was plagued by "fraud, errors or glitches," a move sharply criticized by misinformation researchers.

YouTube justified its action, saying that removing this content could have the "unintended effect of curtailing political speech."

- 'Era of Recklessness' -

Twitter, now known as X, said in November it would no longer enforce its COVID misinformation policy.

Since billionaire Musk's turbulent acquisition of the platform last year, it has restored thousands of accounts that were once suspended for violations including spreading misinformation and introduced a paid verification system that researchers say has served to boost conspiracy theorists.

Last month, the platform said it would now allow paid political advertising from US candidates, reversing a previous ban and sparking concerns over misinformation and hate speech in next year's election.

"Musk's control over Twitter has helped usher in a new era of recklessness by large tech platforms," Nora Benavidez, from the nonpartisan group Free Press, told AFP.

"We're observing a significant rollback in concrete measures companies once had in place."

Platforms are also under pressure from conservative US advocates who accuse them of colluding with the government to censor or suppress right-leaning content under the guise of fact-checking.

"These companies think that if they just keep appeasing Republicans, they'll just stop causing them problems when all they're doing is increasing their own vulnerability," said Berin Szoka, president of TechFreedom, a think tank.

For years, Facebook's algorithm automatically moved posts lower in the feed if they were flagged by one of the platform's third-party fact-checking partners, including AFP, reducing the visibility of false or misleading content.

Facebook recently gave US users the controls, allowing them to move this content higher if they want, in a potentially significant move that the platform said will give users more power over its algorithm.

- Hot topic -

The hyperpolarized political climate in the United States has made content moderation on social media platforms a hot-button issue.

Earlier this month, the US Supreme Court temporarily put on hold an order limiting the ability of President Joe Biden's administration to contact social media companies to remove content it considers to be misinformation.

A lower court of Republican-nominated judges had given that order, ruling that US officials went too far in their efforts to get platforms to censor certain posts.

Misinformation researchers from prominent institutions such as the Stanford Internet Observatory also face a Republican-led congressional inquiry as well as lawsuits from conservative activists who accuse them of promoting censorship -- a charge they deny.

Tech sector downsizing that has gutted trust and safety teams and poor access to platform data have further added to their challenges.

"The public urgently needs to know how platforms are being used to manipulate the democratic process," Ramya Krishnan, from the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, told AFP.

"Independent research is crucial to exposing these efforts, but platforms continue to get in the way by making it more costly and risky to do this work."

V.Sedlak--TPP