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“Vile” online abuse of England footballers should be
criminalised
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End “stranglehold” of big tech companies over what
users can say and see
Government plans to address ‘legal but harmful’ online content
threaten freedom of speech and would be ineffective, peers have
warned.
Instead, existing laws should be enforced properly and any
serious harms not already illegal should be criminalised,
according to a House of Lords Communications and Digital
Committee report published today (22 July).
“Vile racist abuse” directed at some England football players is
an example of the kind of online behaviour, if not already
illegal, that should be criminalised, the committee says.
And a handful of large companies, such as Facebook and Google -
whose primary aim is to profit from users' data - have
“monopolised” the digital ‘public square’ with too much power
over what people can say and see.
The committee welcomes Online Safety Bill proposals to oblige
digital platforms to remove illegal content and protect children
from harm but warns that the draft legislation is “flawed” in
relation to keeping children off porn sites and says that
platforms must ensure they do not over-remove content.
Content which is legal but objectionable to some people should be
addressed by regulating the design of platforms, digital
citizenship education and competition regulation - more effective
and better at protecting freedom of expression, according to the
committee.
Platforms should contribute to more resources for the police to
enforce the law effectively, including online harassment, death
threats, incitement, stirring up hatred and extreme pornography
on the basis that polluters should pay.
, chair of the
committee, said:
“If the government believes that a type of content is
sufficiently harmful, it should be criminalised.
“We would expect this to include, for example, any of the
vile racist abuse directed at members of the England football
team which isn’t already illegal. It has no place in our society
and the full force of the law must be brought down on the
perpetrators urgently.
“The right to speak your mind is the hallmark of a free
society and a right long treasured in Britain but it isn’t an
unfettered right.
“The rights and preferences of individuals must be at the
heart of a new, joined-up regulatory approach, bringing together
competition policy, data, design, law enforcement and the
protection of children.
“Britain can be a world leader, setting standards to
which other countries can aspire. We must get this
right.”
Platforms’ moderation decisions are often “unreasonably
inconsistent, driven by political and business interests, and
have stifled legitimate debate”, the committee says, and
government proposals to require them to respect ‘content of
democratic importance’ don’t go far enough.
added:
“The benefits of freedom of expression online mustn’t be
curtailed by companies such as Facebook and Google, too often
guided their commercial and political interests than the rights
and wellbeing of their users.
“People have little choice but to use these platforms
because of the lack of competition. Tougher regulation is long
overdue and the government must urgently give the Digital Markets
Unit the powers it needs to end these companies’
stranglehold.”