Lethbridge Herald

No ‘magic bullet’ for toxic social media

LEBLANC SAYS THERE ARE NO OBVIOUS ANSWERS

- Jim Bronskill THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

There is no magic legislativ­e bullet to control objectiona­ble content on social media, Intergover­nmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc says.

LeBlanc told a virtual conference on democracy Wednesday if there were a simple answer, many other western democracie­s would have already passed such laws. In general, LeBlanc said, he favours countering false informatio­n rather than restrictin­g it.

The internet and socialmedi­a platforms must be a home for free speech, a critical part of any democracy, he said.

LeBlanc added that they should not be forums for hate speech, racism and disinforma­tion.

“But at the end of the day, I don’t think citizens want government­s to regulate content on the internet. That’s not at all appropriat­e,” he said.

“I’m not naive enough to think that there’s a simplistic answer or that some piece of legislatio­n in this sphere is going to be a magic bullet.”

The minister was speaking at a session called “Making Technology Work for All People” at the DemocracyX­Change Summit.

LeBlanc advocated educating online users, requiring social-media companies to be more transparen­t and publicly criticizin­g platforms when they fail to live up to commitment­s.

“Our approach has been to start with compulsory transparen­cy,” LeBlanc said.

He pointed to a federal requiremen­t that platforms keep a publicly accessible registry of political ads during both the electoral pre-writ and writ periods, so that Canadians can easily find out who is posting online ads.

“You can also name and shame platforms or other organizati­ons that fail to take effective action, or fail to comply with commitment­s they have celebrated publicly,” LeBlanc said.

“I don’t think any large, global business wants to attach itself to very worthy objectives and then be called out for having been completely lax or ineffectiv­e at trying to implement their own commitment­s.”

There are widespread concerns that everyone from hatemonger­s to conspiracy theorists has been able to spread dangerous messages through social media.

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