Governing Fake News: The Regulation of Social Media and the Right to Freedom of Expression in the Era of Emergency

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-41
Author(s):  
Donato VESE

Governments around the world are strictly regulating information on social media in the interests of addressing fake news. There is, however, a risk that the uncontrolled spread of information could increase the adverse effects of the COVID-19 health emergency through the influence of false and misleading news. Yet governments may well use health emergency regulation as a pretext for implementing draconian restrictions on the right to freedom of expression, as well as increasing social media censorship (ie chilling effects). This article seeks to challenge the stringent legislative and administrative measures governments have recently put in place in order to analyse their negative implications for the right to freedom of expression and to suggest different regulatory approaches in the context of public law. These controversial government policies are discussed in order to clarify why freedom of expression cannot be allowed to be jeopardised in the process of trying to manage fake news. Firstly, an analysis of the legal definition of fake news in academia is presented in order to establish the essential characteristics of the phenomenon (Section II). Secondly, the legislative and administrative measures implemented by governments at both international (Section III) and European Union (EU) levels (Section IV) are assessed, showing how they may undermine a core human right by curtailing freedom of expression. Then, starting from the premise of social media as a “watchdog” of democracy and moving on to the contention that fake news is a phenomenon of “mature” democracy, the article argues that public law already protects freedom of expression and ensures its effectiveness at the international and EU levels through some fundamental rules (Section V). There follows a discussion of the key regulatory approaches, and, as alternatives to government intervention, self-regulation and especially empowering users are proposed as strategies to effectively manage fake news by mitigating the risks of undue interference by regulators in the right to freedom of expression (Section VI). The article concludes by offering some remarks on the proposed solution and in particular by recommending the implementation of reliability ratings on social media platforms (Section VII).

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 208-220 ◽  

Fake news is not a new phenomenon. With the mushrooming of smartphone users and the easy access to the internet, fake news is spreading at very high speed from people to people. Why do people flagrantly believe fake news? Why don‟t people fact-check before sharing information with others? etc., are still some of the questions unanswered. The panic created by fake news during the time of the Covid-19 pandemic outbreak is also not less. Hence, this study aims to focus on understanding people‟s perspectives on controlling the spread of fake news on social media. The respective study is based on quantitative data analysis of the responses of 300 social media users across India, collected online in April 2020 during a nationwide lockdown. The study arrived at a conclusion stating that self-regulation may not deliver a proper effect on controlling the spread of fake news. But, organising effective campaigns to build social media literacy can be one of the potential measures that can be implemented in order to control the spread of fake news over social media platforms. The respondents of the study also agree to bring-in a national policy and a national regulatory body control the spread of fake news over social media platforms. Hence, this particular study can support the Government of India to make decisions to roll out regulatory measures to control the spread of fake news through social media, which is still on the red tape.


Author(s):  
Adebowale Jeremy Adetayo

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought about a surge of fake news on social media. This dilemma has caused a ripple effect in society with increasing censorship on social media, which threatens the freedom of expression. The populace cannot effectively progress until they understand the threat posed by fake news and censorship. To protect our fundamental rights of expression, society must learn from librarians. The chapter explores the role of librarians in mitigating fake news. The chapter also identifies possible societal consequences of fake news. The chapter concludes that librarians should inoculate the public to pre-empt them from accepting fake news.


Tripodos ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 53-67
Author(s):  
Pavel Slutskiy

Sustainable Development Goal 16 stresses the importance of access to information. It is clearly emphasised in target 16.10 —“to ensure public access to information and protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with national legislation and international agreements”. With social media becoming the default communication platforms, the questions of the extent to which their content moderating models are conducive to the implementation of public access to information and fundamental freedoms are becoming increasingly important. Facebook, Instagram, Tumblr as well as Twitter and other social media platforms have been recently criticised for censorship of user-generated content. This article looks at the controversy surrounding these policies from the property rights perspective —focusing on the role which property rights play in securing the freedom of expression. By recognising the owners’ right to control the legitimately owned property, I conclude that social media are not engaged in “censorship” —they merely exercise property rights. There is a difference between a private platform refusing to carry someone’s ideas on their property and a government prohibiting from speaking on a legitimately owned property. Keywords: SDG 16.10, freedom of expression, censorship, social media, property rights.


Tripodos ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 53-68
Author(s):  
Pavel Slutskiy

Sustainable Development Goal 16 stresses the importance of access to information. It is clearly emphasised in target 16.10 —“to ensure public access to information and protect fundamental freedoms, in accordance with national legislation and international agreements”. With social media becoming the default communication platforms, the questions of the extent to which their content moderating models are conducive to the implementation of public access to information and fundamental freedoms are becoming increasingly important. Facebook, Instagram, Tumblr as well as Twitter and other social media platforms have been recently criticised for censorship of user-generated content. This article looks at the controversy surrounding these policies from the property rights perspective —focusing on the role which property rights play in securing the freedom of expression. By recognising the owners’ right to control the legitimately owned property, I conclude that social media are not engaged in “censorship” —they merely exercise property rights. There is a difference between a private platform refusing to carry someone’s ideas on their property and a government prohibiting from speaking on a legitimately owned property. Keywords: SDG 16.10, freedom of expression, censorship, social media, property rights.


2021 ◽  
pp. 194016122110472
Author(s):  
Punny Kabir

The emergence and the consequent popularity of social media in the 21st century have given dissenters living in exile an unprecedented opportunity to stay involved in domestic debates and disseminate information to local and international audiences. From an authoritarian context, the rebellious voices from exiled spaces are considered threats for building external pressure on the regime. In contemporary Bangladesh, the right to exercise freedom of expression is increasingly curtailed by various state-sponsored repressive measures, forcing many dissidents to leave the country. But many of them are continuously participating in civic affairs taking place in the digital sphere of the society they physically left behind. Why and how do certain exiled dissidents influence public discourse in Bangladesh through social media platforms? This is a vital question that drives the qualitative ethnographic research which employs interviews of five exiles and analysis of their social media usage from May to October 2020.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 405-433
Author(s):  
Bruna Marques da Silva

A sociedade global e as novas tecnologias modificaram a produção, a disseminação e as regulações sobre discursos de ódio, principalmente aqueles expressados on-line. De um lado, as empresas transnacionais de mídias sociais possuem políticas de publicidade com diretrizes para remover conteúdos considerados como discurso de ódio ou expressões semelhantes. De outro, o direito internacional dos direitos humanos, que fornece diretrizes interpretativas para a problemática à luz do direito à liberdade de expressão, emite preocupações sobre como essas normatizações de empresas de mídias sociais são geridas e operacionalizadas. Nesse sentido, o objetivo deste estudo é analisar o panorama das diferentes regulações normativas que recaem sobre o fenômeno do discurso de ódio à luz da perspectiva do pluralismo jurídico. Além disso, a pesquisa investiga se a autorregulação regulada pode ser considerada uma ferramenta estratégica para auxiliar na proteção da liberdade de expressão, e lidar com a complexibilidade das dinâmicas da sociedade global em relação aos discursos de ódio on-line. A metodologia utilizada é de natureza hipotético-dedutiva, com levantamento bibliográfico e documental a respeito dos temas relacionados. Os resultados indicam que a autorregulação regulada pode ser considerada uma ferramenta estratégica para conciliar a dinâmica específica das plataformas digitais de mídias sociais com as regulações do sistema jurídico oficial sobre os temas.     Abstract: The global society and new technologies have changed the production, dissemination, and regulation of hate speech, especially those expressed online. On one hand, the advertising policies for transnational social media companies include guidelines for removing hate speech content or similar expressions. From another, the international human rights law has concerns about how these social media company policies are managed and operationalized in relation to the right to freedom of expression. In this sense, the objective of this study is to analyze the panorama of the different normative regulations on hate speech in the light of perspective of legal pluralism. In addition, the study investigates if the regulated self-regulation can be considered a strategic tool to help protect freedom of expression in the complexity of global society dynamics about hate speech online. The methodology used is based on the hypothetical-deductive method, with bibliographic and documentary revision. The results indicate that regulated self-regulation can be considered a strategic tool to conciliate the specific dynamics of social medias platforms and the regulations of the official legal system. Keywords: Hate speech; Legal pluralism; Transnational regulations; Social medias; Regulated self-regulation.     Recebido em: outubro/2019. Aprovado em: agosto/2020.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 57
Author(s):  
Paras Gulati ◽  
Abiodun Adeyinka. O. ◽  
Saritha Ramkumar

The rapid spread of online fake news through some media platforms has increased over the last decade. Misinformation and disinformation of any kind is extensively propagated through social media platforms, some of the popular ones are Facebook and Twitter. With the present global pandemic ravaging the world and killing hundreds of thousands, getting fake news from these social media platforms can exacerbate the situation. Unfortunately, there has been a lot of misinformation and disinformation on COVID-19 virus implications of which has been disastrous for various people, countries, and economies. The right information is crucial in the fight against this pandemic and, in this age of data explosion, where TBs of data is generated every minute, near real time identification and tagging of misinformation is quintessential to minimize its consequences. In this paper, the authors use Natural Language Processing (NLP) based two-step approach to classify a tweet to be a potentially misinforming one or not. Firstly, COVID -19 tagged tweets were filtered based on the presence of keywords formulated from the list of common misinformation spread around the virus. Secondly, a deep neural network (RNN) trained on openly available real and fake news dataset was used to predict if the keyword filtered tweets were factual or misinformed.


Communicology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-179
Author(s):  
E.S. Nadezhkina

The term “digital public diplomacy” that appeared in the 21st century owes much to the emergence and development of the concept of Web 2.0 (interactive communication on the Internet). The principle of network interaction, in which the system becomes better with an increase in the number of users and the creation of user-generated content, made it possible to create social media platforms where news and entertainment content is created and moderated by the user. Such platforms have become an expression of the opinions of various groups of people in many countries of the world, including China. The Chinese segment of the Internet is “closed”, and many popular Western services are blocked in it. Studying the structure of Chinese social media platforms and microblogging, as well as analyzing targeted content is necessary to understand China’s public opinion, choose the right message channels and receive feedback for promoting the country’s public diplomacy. This paper reveals the main Chinese social media platforms and microblogging and provides the assessment of their popularity, as well as possibility of analyzing China’s public opinion based on “listening” to social media platforms and microblogging.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 556
Author(s):  
Thaer Thaher ◽  
Mahmoud Saheb ◽  
Hamza Turabieh ◽  
Hamouda Chantar

Fake or false information on social media platforms is a significant challenge that leads to deliberately misleading users due to the inclusion of rumors, propaganda, or deceptive information about a person, organization, or service. Twitter is one of the most widely used social media platforms, especially in the Arab region, where the number of users is steadily increasing, accompanied by an increase in the rate of fake news. This drew the attention of researchers to provide a safe online environment free of misleading information. This paper aims to propose a smart classification model for the early detection of fake news in Arabic tweets utilizing Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques, Machine Learning (ML) models, and Harris Hawks Optimizer (HHO) as a wrapper-based feature selection approach. Arabic Twitter corpus composed of 1862 previously annotated tweets was utilized by this research to assess the efficiency of the proposed model. The Bag of Words (BoW) model is utilized using different term-weighting schemes for feature extraction. Eight well-known learning algorithms are investigated with varying combinations of features, including user-profile, content-based, and words-features. Reported results showed that the Logistic Regression (LR) with Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency (TF-IDF) model scores the best rank. Moreover, feature selection based on the binary HHO algorithm plays a vital role in reducing dimensionality, thereby enhancing the learning model’s performance for fake news detection. Interestingly, the proposed BHHO-LR model can yield a better enhancement of 5% compared with previous works on the same dataset.


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