The Hamilton Spectator

Musk’s free speech plans expected to face challenges

Experts say regulatory hurdles loom as billionair­e touts ‘inclusive’ platform

- TARA DESCHAMPS

Canada and government­s around the world could scuttle Elon Musk’s plans to ease restrictio­ns on Twitter in the name of free speech, say social media and antihate experts.

They believe Musk, a self-described “free speech absolutist” whose $44-billion (U.S.) bid to take over the platform was approved by Twitter’s board on Monday, will face several regulatory hurdles as he works to create “an inclusive arena for free speech.”

Among the challenges are Canada’s plans to reintroduc­e a bill aimed at reducing hate speech on online platforms like Twitter, and the European Union, which already warned Musk on Tuesday that the company must obey local content rules targeting harmful and false informatio­n.

“The broad sounding principles of free speech become much more complicate­d because one has to take into account questions around the types of moderation that are already happening … and what different government­s already do to put pressure on Twitter and how Twitter tries to respond to that,” said Heidi Tworek, a senior fellow at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation and a Canada research chair at the University of British Columbia.

Musk’s bid to buy the platform still requires sign off from shareholde­rs and U.S. regulators, but he has already tweeted that he plans to make the platform’s algorithms open source to increase trust, defeat spam bots and authentica­te all humans.

With Musk’s bid to take over Twitter not due to close until later this year, how he will tackle regulation is still unknown, but Tworek feels his approach is worth watching because Musk has engaged in alleged online harassment.

She cites incidents where Musk faced a 2019 defamation suit after he compared British cave diver Vernon Unsworth to a pedophile on Twitter and other times when he lashed out at journalist­s who criticized him.

Michele Austin, Twitter’s public policy director for Canada and the U.S., faced questions from MPs on the public safety committee Tuesday about the potential impact of Musk.

She said: “I can’t speculate on what Mr. Musk may or may not do,” adding the deal was still going through.

Fareed Khan, founder of Canadians United Against Hate, feels Musk’s track record coupled with his Twitter bid should have regulators, government­s and Canada on guard.

“Putting complete control of one of the world’s most influentia­l social media megaphones, with hundreds of millions of followers, in the hands of a man who believes in absolute free speech is dangerous, would have major negative social and political repercussi­ons, and could lead to those with a huge Twitter following destabiliz­ing societies if they chose to,” he said, in a news release.

 ?? PATRICK PLEUL THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Elon Musk can expect to face a Canadian bill aimed at reducing hate speech on online platforms like Twitter. The European Union, meanwhile, warned Musk on Tuesday that the company must obey local content rules targeting harmful and false informatio­n.
PATRICK PLEUL THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Elon Musk can expect to face a Canadian bill aimed at reducing hate speech on online platforms like Twitter. The European Union, meanwhile, warned Musk on Tuesday that the company must obey local content rules targeting harmful and false informatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada