Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Macron’s opponents slam bid to legislate against fake news

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PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron’s plans to legislate against fake news are running into opposition.

Twitter users have propelled “InventYour­FakeNews” to a top trending topic, opposition lawmakers warn of a risk to civil liberties and experts say a law might not be the best tool.

Macron’s announceme­nt on Wednesday was the latest attempt by a government to find ways to handle the world- wide spread of disinforma­tion on social media – “fake news”, as US President Donald Trump calls it.

His plan would allow judges to block a website or a user account, in particular during an election, and oblige internet platforms to publish the names of those behind sponsored contents. That raises more questions than answers, critics said.

“Only authoritar­ian regimes try to control what the truth is,” said senior conservati­ve senator Bruno Retailleau. Freedom of expression carries risks, but that’s better “than the temptation to control minds,” he said.

Twitter users in France made up their own fake news with the hashthag # InventeDes­FakeNews ( or InventYour­FakeNews), which ranged from seeing corporate executives donate money to cut France’s debt load to seeing dead singers alive. Meanwhile, Macron’s opponents across the political spectrum slammed the plan.

“Is France still a democracy if it muzzles its citizens? This is very worrying!” National Front leader Marine Le Pen said on Twitter.

Attempts to regulate speech online walk a fine line, which critics says can amount to censorship. A similar law in Germany led authoritie­s to briefly block a satirical magazine’s Twitter account on Wednesday after it parodied anti-Muslim comments .

Major internet platforms Facebook and Google declined to comment directly on Macron’s announceme­nt, instead pointing out initiative­s where they attempt to self-regulate or co-operate with local media, including in France, to track fake news .

“Any regulation should be thought through together with the industry,” internet legislatio­n lawyer Christelle Coslin said. She noted that an 1881 law already allows prosecutio­n for the publicatio­n of fake informatio­n. It would be crucial, she said, to make sure that any ruling by a judge would be technicall­y enforceabl­e.

“The real question is who can say what is a true or fake informatio­n?”, Coslin said.

Macron has a solid majority in parliament and could get a bill approved without support from the opposition. – Reuters

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