The Scotsman

Elon Musk urged to ‘clean up’ Twitter

- By MARTYN LANDI newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Elon Musk must take down the "coordinate­d armies of bot accounts" on Twitter that disrupt genuine debate if he truly wants to make the platform about free speech, the chair of the Joint Committee on the draft Online Safety Bill has said.

Tory MP Damian Collins said the billionair­e needed to follow through on his pledge to support free speech on the site and "defeat the spam bots" after it was confirmed he had agreed a £34.5 billion deal to take over the platform.

Mr Collins is a prominent figure in scrutinisi­ng the tech sector, having led a joint committee of Parliament in examining the Online Safety Bill, the Government's proposed new rules for safety on the internet.

"Elon Musk calls Twitter the digital town square, but it has become a place where free speech is drowned out by coordinate­d armies of bot accounts spreading disinforma­tion and division," he said.

"Twitter is a place where many users feel inhibited from expressing themselves, because of the hate and abuse they will receive.

"This digital town square is currently not a place of genuine debate, but a forum where campaigns, sometimes backed by agencies of the Russian state, seek to game Twitter's algorithms to promote their world views and suppress any voices which dissent from it."

"If Elon Musk wants to really make Twitter about free speech, he will need to clean up the digital town square."

Reaction to Mr Musk's proposed takeover has been mixed, with some industry experts, academics and even users of Twitter raising concerns about the Tesla's boss' stance as a "free speech absolutist" and whether this could mean a loosening of content moderation rules.

But Twitter founder Jack Dorsey has welcomed the takeover, calling it the "right path" for the company and hailing the decision to let Mr Musk take the social media platform into private ownership and away from the ad model and Wall Street.

"In principle, I don't believe anyone should own or run Twitter," Mr Dorsey said.

"It wants to be a public good at a protocol level, not a company.

"Solving for the problem of it being a company however, Elon is the singular solution I trust. I trust his mission to extend the light of consciousn­ess."

A spokespers­on for Downing Street said that "regardless of ownership, all social media platforms must be responsibl­e".

"That includes protecting users from harm on their sites," the Prime Minister's official spokesman said, adding that Twitter was an "important tool" and that the Government would "continue to work with them to make sure it continues to improve".

But online safety campaigner­s have warned that any change to content moderation could have a "chilling effect" on child safety on the site.

Andy Burrows, the head of child safety online policy at children's charity the NSPCC, said urgent clarity was needed over what approach a Muskled Twitter would take to tackling online abuse.

 ?? ?? ↑ Elon Musk’s own Twitter profile on the social media platform
↑ Elon Musk’s own Twitter profile on the social media platform

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