Thierry Breton, the European commissioner for the internal market, warns Elon Musk about disinformation on X related to the Israel-Hamas conflict.
Europe gives Elon Musk 24 hours to respond about Israel-Hamas war misinformation and violence on X::Thierry Breton, the European commissioner for the internal market, warns Elon Musk about disinformation on X related to the Israel-Hamas conflict.
I, too, think Elon is a dork, but I donāt understand this request. Is the EU holding websites responsible for the content uploaded to them? If so, is Lemmy responsible for all the anti-Semitic material? If so, I donāt understand how this is tenable. No social platform has the resources to monitor all content before upload. This would, effectively, ban all social media in the EU. While I donāt particularly lament such an outcome, I do feel we should at least evaluate such a decision. As of yet, this hasnāt been made clear. Iām not a fan of legislation by deception. If the EU is banning social media, Iād like them to be honest about it so we can discuss it like adults.
Thanks for more info. Iām going to read through the Act when I have time later today. If I understand you correctly, and the summary, it appears that the EU just effectively banned social media in the EU. This was definitely not advertised to citizens in advance, and like it or not, many people like their social media. Given this, there are going to be some tough conversations in the coming months. This looks like an incredible legislative fuck-up, because a ban does not have anywhere near popular public support.
You should read it at your earliest convenience, as your preemptive conclusion that the "EU just preemptively banned social media in the EU" is absolutely not what the Digital Services Act is about.
"The DSA proposal maintains the current rule according to which companies that host other's data are not liable for the content unless they actually know it is illegal, and upon obtaining such knowledge do not act to remove it."
You've read the Digital Markets Act, not the Digital Services Act and everything you say sounds completely made up again. I'm sure as shit not gonna read the whole thing you linked just to prove you wrong. Either come up with quotes from the right document or this discussion is over.
To my knowledge, the current status of x formerly known as twitter, is that it is terrible. Elon has fired most of the staff, part of that staff was content monitors that should delete misinformation before it gains too much traction. The EU holds websites responsible if they don't at least try dealing with it. Lemmy is not even a blip on their radar, and would not even be easily threatened being a collection of random servers