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Post by Flying Monkeys on Dec 28, 2017 23:25:40 GMT
Facebook and Twitter could face sanctions if they continue to stonewall parliament over Russian interference in the EU referendum, the chair of a Commons inquiry has said.
Damian Collins, chair of the Department of Culture, Media and Sport select committee, which is looking into so-called “fake news”, has given the companies until 18 January to correct their failure to hand over information he requested about Russian misinformation campaigns on their platforms. www.theguardian.com/media/2017/dec/28/facebook-and-twitter-threatened-with-sanctions-in-uk-fake-news-inquiryGood, it's about time these idiots realised that the law of the land they operate in is a higher power than their t's & c's with their users.
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Post by ayatollah on Dec 28, 2017 23:31:22 GMT
Not that I have any good will toward Facebook and Twitter, but will taking a side in an election or referendum and telling people why you prefer said side now be illegal?
IN the US we have the same controversy, that Russians interfered and altered the results of our 2016 presidential election using "misinformation". There is plenty is misinformation coming from US based mainstream media though.
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Dec 29, 2017 13:36:24 GMT
Not that I have any good will toward Facebook and Twitter, but will taking a side in an election or referendum and telling people why you prefer said side now be illegal? IN the US we have the same controversy, that Russians interfered and altered the results of our 2016 presidential election using "misinformation". There is plenty is misinformation coming from US based mainstream media though. In the UK, we have regulatory bodies that enforce codes of conduct with the media (TV, press, websites). Opinion pieces must be clearly labelled, news must be news only, both sides of a story must be told etc. I suspect your environment is different so Facebook and Twitter come from a different background. That, however, is no excuse and Facebook and Twitter are sidestepping these rules and refusing to abide by them because they think they are more important than UK (or any country's) law. They are not, they will be taught that hopefully.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 18:47:55 GMT
Not that I have any good will toward Facebook and Twitter, but will taking a side in an election or referendum and telling people why you prefer said side now be illegal? IN the US we have the same controversy, that Russians interfered and altered the results of our 2016 presidential election using "misinformation". There is plenty is misinformation coming from US based mainstream media though. In the UK, we have regulatory bodies that enforce codes of conduct with the media (TV, press, websites). Opinion pieces must be clearly labelled, news must be news only, both sides of a story must be told etc. I suspect your environment is different so Facebook and Twitter come from a different background. That, however, is no excuse and Facebook and Twitter are sidestepping these rules and refusing to abide by them because they think they are more important than UK (or any country's) law. They are not, they will be taught that hopefully. I can understand how an American might be confused about media outlets having to conform to a code of conduct when such codes were effectively removed from the American media in the Regan administration. In the 90s Sky began showing the new cable news channel Fox news in the UK. After many complaints about it's bullshit stories and outright lies Offcom investigated and decided that Fox News couldn't be classed as a news channel under British law. It made Sky put a banner on the channel that said "This channel is not a news channel and should be viewed for entertainment purposes only"😃 Say what you want about our media monkies but it is still streets ahead of the American media. And as for Facebook and Twitter a UK wide block of access to their sites until they cooperate with this enquiry. The lost advertising revenues and hit to their share price might make them more cooperative.
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MightyMikey
Nick Nack
Thanks for the response! Fuck you too.
Posts: 185
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Post by MightyMikey on Dec 29, 2017 19:05:30 GMT
The US does have the FCC. We are not without regulations.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2017 21:12:12 GMT
The US does have the FCC. We are not without regulations. Except this happened: And that is why you have the media you have today. The UK broadcasters still operates under rules similar to the fairness doctrine(particularly the BBC).
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MightyMikey
Nick Nack
Thanks for the response! Fuck you too.
Posts: 185
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Post by MightyMikey on Dec 30, 2017 2:25:35 GMT
The US does have the FCC. We are not without regulations. Except this happened: And that is why you have the media you have today. The UK broadcasters still operates under rules similar to the fairness doctrine(particularly the BBC). No I hear you, but in the US, our broadcasters aren't government subsidized. To a degree it would infringe on the first amendment right of free speech, because they are private companies. That's also why we have double the commercials. In the US TV programming really only exists to sell ad space. The FCC only regulates in regard to immoral or lewd behavior etc. They can't really control content other than eliminating nudity or bad words. I don't blame the divisiveness on lack of regulation. People will turn off the program they don't want to hear, and go back and forth to stations with extreme viewpoints in order to hear both sides.
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Post by Flying Monkeys on Dec 30, 2017 13:04:59 GMT
And as for Facebook and Twitter a UK wide block of access to their sites until they cooperate with this enquiry. I would love to see that but it'll never happen because the media, Labour, various idiots would spin it as fascist Tory censorship of the media (ignoring the real purpose of the block). Instead, I think we'll just see the threat of fines.
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