Daily Mail

Internet giants told: Reveal true scale of hatred on your sites

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

‘A duty to protect children’

FACEBOOK and Twitter will be told to reveal the true scale of online hate as part of a crackdown on the ‘Wild West of the internet’.

Culture Secretary Karen Bradley will tomorrow unveil a new ‘internet safety strategy’ to ensure web firms face up to their responsibi­lities on trolling and cyberbully­ing.

As part of the strategy, social media companies will for the first time be told to publish how many complaints they get each year about abuse – and what proportion of abusive messages are actually taken down.

Mrs Bradley will say that she wants Britain to be the safest place in the world to go online.

Ministers want the firms to publish an annual ‘ internet safety transparen­cy report’, laying out how they handle complaints and what efforts they make to moderate content.

The Government says the move will expose the ‘true scale of risks and harms that users encounter on their platforms’.

Web firms will be told to disclose how many children, women and gay people are targeted and how many people are targeted on religious grounds.

All the informatio­n will be pub- licly available, enabling parents to shine a light on which social media firms are taking their social responsibi­lities seriously, and which are not.

It will also give parents an indication of where the online risks are for their children and what is being done to tackle them.

The transparen­cy report will be used to show the volume of content reported to companies, and the proportion of content that has been taken down from the service.

Companies will also have to reveal how each site approaches moderation and any changes in policy and resourcing.

The Government hopes it does not have to force Facebook and Twitter to agree to publish the annual report, saying it wants them to agree to do so voluntaril­y.

Figures show that in the past year, almost one fifth of 12 to 15year- olds encountere­d something online that they ‘found worrying or nasty in some way’.

And almost half of adult users say they have seen something that has upset or offended them on social media.

Mrs Bradley will demand that Facebook, Twitter and other sites sign up to a new online code of practice. The strategy will also include a new push to ensure children are taught the skills they need to be safe online.

It was unclear last night if there would be any penalties if web firms refuse to comply – or whether the Government would threaten to legislate if they did not agree.

The move follows years of complaints about web firms not acting quickly enough to take down abusive messages.

Teachers say cyberbully­ing is a growing problem. While children used to be able to escape playground abuse by going home, now it follows them home via social media.

Even when children complain to web firms about bullying messages, nothing is done to punish the perpetrato­r.

MPs – particular­ly female MPs – have also complained of the rising tide of online abuse. Thousands of abusive tweets were sent to Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott alone during the election campaign. The BBC’s political editor, Laura Kuenssberg, has also been the victim of hate tweets sent by hard-Left internet users, while Cambridge classicist Mary Beard has been threatened as well.

The Daily Mail has repeatedly highlighte­d the dangers to young people posed by the internet. Our Block Online Porn campaign persuaded the Government to bring in an opt-in scheme ensuring only over-18s could see adult material, and age verificati­on for porn sites will be introduced later this year.

Speaking at the Tory conference last week, Mrs Bradley said: ‘As a government we have a duty to protect children and vulnerable people from the less-family friendly corners of the internet.

‘We have all heard about the dangers of cyber-bulling, Twitter abuse and trolling on the internet. These are problems Conservati­ves are tackling head on.

‘I believe Britain should be the safest place in the world to go online and this government is determined to make that a reality. Put simply, behaviour that is unacceptab­le in normal life should be unacceptab­le on a computer screen.

‘We all have a responsibi­lity to make sure the internet is as safe as it possibly can be.’

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