Toronto Star

Group wants social media held to same standard as publishers

Courts asked to issue penalties to platforms that knowingly spread harmful content

- DAVID PADDON

Friends of Canadian Broadcasti­ng is calling on Parliament to restrain social media platforms from distributi­ng harmful or hateful content by applying the same laws that publishers and broadcaste­rs already face.

The lobby group’s executive director says courts should be penalizing social media platforms that knowingly spread harmful content.

Daniel Bernhard made the comments shortly after Friends of Canadian

Broadcasti­ng released a research paper that argues social media platforms aren’t passive or neutral when it comes to content distributi­on.

The report says platforms such as Facebook and YouTube routinely exercise editorial control by promoting content that users have never asked to see or sometimes conceal content without consulting users.

The report says traditiona­l publishers can be held partly liable under Canadian law for harmful content, but the same standard hasn’t been applied to internet platforms.

The report was released as members of Parliament return to Ottawa this week and the Trudeau government prepares to lay out its plans for the coming session.

Among other things, Bernhard said that social media tell regulators and advertiser­s that they have very detailed knowledge of what’s being posted on

their platforms and exercise control over what is made available to the public.

“(Facebook CEO) Mark Zuckerberg has claimed under oath that Facebook takes down 99 per cent of terrorist content before a human user ever sees it (and) 89 per cent of hate speech supposedly comes down before a human ever sees it,” Bernhard said.

He said that means Facebook, in particular, and social media, in general, should have the same responsibi­lity to abide by Canadian laws as convention­al publishers and broadcaste­rs.

“If a judge finds that the content is illegal and that a platform has amplified it, the platform should be held responsibl­e. And not only that, but that the penalty should be commensura­te to their revenue and size so it hurts accordingl­y,” Bernhard said.

Facebook has said internet platforms are recognized as intermedia­ries, not publishers, under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement. But Zuckerberg has also said Facebook has a responsibi­lity to keep people safe and suggested new regulation­s could provide a standardiz­ed approach.

“These are complex issues,” a Facebook statement said Monday.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? A report from Friends of Canadian Broadcasti­ng says platforms such as YouTube routinely exercise editorial control by promoting content that users have never asked to see or by concealing content without consulting users.
DREAMSTIME A report from Friends of Canadian Broadcasti­ng says platforms such as YouTube routinely exercise editorial control by promoting content that users have never asked to see or by concealing content without consulting users.
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