The Sunday Guardian

British government will not protect UK from Russia, China’s ‘disinforma­tion’ by making its internet more like theirs

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- LONDON

This year, Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government is finally putting its longplanne­d Online Safety Bill before Parliament.

Inherited from Johnson’s predecesso­r Theresa May, the Bill was intended to make the UK “the safest place in the world to go online”, and will indeed attempt to address some genuine online harms, like distributi­ng indecent images of children or instructio­ns on how to make suicide bombs.

But most of the Bill is not about these crimes—which are rightly already illegal. Instead, as our recent paper at the Free Speech Union described, the Bill will restrict the expression of perfectly legal but controvers­ial opinion online in a way that is unpreceden­ted in the history of Britain’s democracy.

Rooted in the disturbing new belief that offensive speech can somehow be “harmful” to adults, the Bill is a harbinger of the authoritar­ian ideas that now threaten all democracie­s. One of the justificat­ions for this Bill is the online disinforma­tion that emanates from China and Russia in particular: but instead of protecting us from these autocracie­s, the Bill’s attempts to address this problem will inadverten­tly make Britain more like them.

Why the risk? The Free Speech Union has been drawing attention to the dangers for free speech in these plans since we founded the organisati­on last year. Yet despite some improvemen­ts, the government still plans a “duty of care” for internet companies, making them “take responsibi­lity” for users’ safety and prevent harm resulting from other people’s conduct. To fulfil this “duty of care”, internet firms will need to deal with “harmful content” that risks “significan­t adverse…psychologi­cal impact” on adults. But that could mean almost anything.

This attempt to make companies responsibl­e for how members of the public treat each other also erodes individual responsibi­lity: is a pub responsibl­e for how its customers behave when they leave? Companies that allow people to be “harmed” by users’ speech risk being fined millions of pounds, so they are bound to censor just to avoid trouble.

The censorious broadcast regulator Ofcom is also being rewarded with a new reign over the internet. It will advise government on how to suppress “disinforma­tion” and “misinforma­tion”, which the government has defined as “inadverten­tly spreading false informatio­n”, a dangerousl­y broad definition which could simply mean accidental­ly saying something that is untrue, an inevitable part of any debate. The government wants to prevent disinforma­tion from autocracie­s like Russia and China, but it is trying to solve the problem by giving the British state a degree of power over debate online that will make it more like these very autocracie­s. In any democracy, the solution to disinforma­tion should be more debate, not less.

Last year, the civil service admitted that these proposals are inspired by Germany’s 2017 “Netzdg” internet law, the model for the repressive online laws of Belarus, Russia and Venezuela. Anyone who has lived a few years in China, for instance, knows that government censors the powerless in the interests of the powerful. So when our government promises that the so-called duty of care will apply to “disinforma­tion… such as anti-vaccinatio­n content”, we must ask who will be censored and who won’t.

Free debate always includes many ideas that are untrue—so too on the internet, with many false claims against vaccines. This year, some politician­s have made claims about the vaccines manufactur­ed in Britain and India, possibly for political reasons and without scientific evidence. The British government has defined disinforma­tion as “deliberate creation and disseminat­ion of false and/or manipulate­d informatio­n… for political… gain”, but will it really censor the Twitter accounts of leading foreign politician­s, or will it just censor the man on the street? A genuinely liberal belief in the marketplac­e of ideas would allow the public the same freedom of speech online as any politician, because open debate is how we uncover the truth. There cannot be different rules for the powerful and the powerless.

Earlier this year, the government also suggested that it approved of Youtube’s policy of censoring content which “contradict­s the World Health Organizati­on”.

But corporatio­ns’ attempts to deprive people of the chance to decide for themselves are nothing to cheer. Why should we not contradict the WHO? After all, it has changed its mind about many aspects of the Covid crisis, and its Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s has called China’s leader Xi Jinping a “visionary”.

As they stand, the plans pose a serious danger to free speech. Britain has long been a leader in freedom of expression, but the government’s plans to make the internet a “safer” place now risk making Britain more like the autocratic countries whose misinforma­tion it wants to defend us against.

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