Scottish Daily Mail

A right to erase your social media history

Delete posts before age 18 Crackdown on extremism links PM pledge to protect children

- By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor

THERESA May will today promise a crackdown on internet giants that gives people the right to have their social media history wiped.

The Prime Minister will pledge to make the country the ‘safest place in the world to be online’, with the threat of punitive new levies unless firms clean up their act.

Web users can demand platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram delete their records from before they were aged 18.

It would mean that adults do not face the prospect of embarrassi­ng pictures they took when younger, or posts they regret writing in their youth, coming back to haunt them.

Sites will also be required not to direct browsers unintentio­nally to hate speech, pornograph­y, or other sources of harm.

And firms will be obliged to take down any inappropri­ate, bullying, harmful or illegal content reported to them or provide an explanatio­n of why not. The entitlemen­ts and protection­s will be backed up with a statutory sanctions regime that gives regulators the ability to fine or prosecute those companies who fail in their legal duties.

Ministers will promise to work with the industry to make changes to social media, app stores and websites to protect minors.

The Tories will put into law the power to impose an industry-wide levy on social media companies if they fail to introduce adequate reforms. The charge, modelled on a levy on the gambling industry, would raise money to provide awareness of potential dangers online.

Mrs May will also promise to make Britain ‘the best place in the world to do business online’ with improvemen­ts to broadband and extra buying and selling rights.

People will be entitled to take up basic digital training throughout their lives. Government department­s will be required to make it

‘Make changes to protect minors’

easier for citizens to access their services using the internet as part of a digital revolution that will also require officials to release all nonsensiti­ve publicly owned data whenever possible.

Households will have the right for low-cost and fast broadband connection­s wherever they live, with transparen­t pricing and easy switching. Online sellers must provide a digital receipt for all purchases, plus simpler terms and conditions.

Mrs May warns one of the ‘greatest challenges’ is ‘how to respond to the opportunit­ies and threats arising from the advance of digitisati­on and automation’.

She said: ‘The internet has brought a wealth of opportunit­y but also significan­t new risks which have evolved faster than society’s response. We want social media companies to do more to help redress the balance and will take action to make sure they do.’

But critics will ask whether the planned measures are enough to counter online dangers.

Earlier this month it was revealed Google, Facebook and other web firms will escape the threat of multi-million pound fines for allowing extremist content.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd said she was ‘not convinced’ fines were the best way to prevent extremists putting videos and documents online.

Facebook has agreed to hire 3,000 staff to police what users post, joining 4,500 already in place.

A MAIL investigat­ion today exposes how unscrupulo­us insurance firms extort interest of up to 45 per cent from customers who pay premiums monthly.

Buried in the small print, these morally indefensib­le charges can add up to £450 to the cost of insuring a car in yet another example of rip-off Britain.

It is no good looking to Labour – in a world of its own, spending fantasy money like water – to stand up for those whose incomes are squeezed. But on planet earth, these are the issues that most affect us.

Theresa May has sworn to champion the Just About Managing. To achieve this, the Tories must pledge to spend taxpayers’ cash as carefully as their own – and rein in the excesses of rip-off Britain.

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