The Scottish Mail on Sunday

No 10 hails new law to prevent tech giants acting as ‘judge and jury’ on news content

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

DOWNING Street is finalising plans for internet giants to be forced to safeguard reputable journalism, as Ministers prepare to introduce new laws to purge the internet of offensive material such as suicide footage and terrorists’ beheading videos.

Under the new Online Safety Bill, companies such as Google and Facebook would be expected to exempt content from legitimate publicatio­ns such as The Mail on Sunday and MailOnline when they perform their duty under the legislatio­n to remove articles that they judge to be ‘harmful’.

Government sources insist that the threat of penalties, possibly running into millions of pounds, should prevent the tech companies ‘acting as judge and jury’ on news coverage and comment by reputable news publishers.

However, media executives who have been consulted over the proposals are understood to have told the Government that they ‘lack teeth’ because there is no cast-iron legal obligation on the internet companies to refrain from ‘censoring’ their content – just a right for the publishers to appeal to the regulator Ofcom after the event.

Under the plans being drafted by officials working for Minister for Media and Data John Whittingda­le, there will be an expectatio­n that the internet companies will not interfere with news publishers’ content once the bill becomes law, unlike other online content, which they will have to monitor and if necessary remove under threat of draconian penalties.

But nor would there be a blanket ban on them doing so, as long as they comply with new requiremen­ts to safeguard journalist­ic content. It is not yet clear what form those safeguards will take.

News industry executives are concerned that stories published legitimate­ly in a newspaper like The Mail on Sunday could be prevented from appearing online by American-owned internet companies, with a state-backed regulator acting as court of appeal.

They point to an incident earlier this year when TalkRadio was removed from Google-owned YouTube following an automated ruling that it had breached Google guidelines against contradict­ing official Covid policy. The radio station was later reinstated.

It has also been suggested that Google manipulate­s its search algorithms to favour Left-leaning outlets such as the BBC and The Guardian.

Boris Johnson has discussed with aides whether the bill could be adapted to limit the ability of companies such as Twitter and Facebook to censor politician­s, after the social media platforms applied warning labels to 65 tweets by Donald Trump during the US presidenti­al election but none to those from Joe Biden. Mr Johnson described it privately as ‘limiting the ability of a bunch of woke California­ns to interfere in the UK’.

It comes as news publishers are also locked in dispute with the internet companies over payments for the content they distribute: last month, following a stand-off with Facebook, the Australian government watered down laws forcing the tech giants to pay for news. It was announced last year that a new watchdog, the Digital Markets Unit, will be given powers to levy large fines on online companies to stop customers or companies being treated unfairly and to make firms give smaller rivals access to their vast troves of data. The unit will become fully operationa­l by next year, as part of the Competitio­n and Markets Authority.

The CMA has called for stronger powers over Google and Facebook to address their unassailab­le positions in digital advertisin­g and social media.

A Government source said: ‘Companies such as Facebook will be under a duty to safeguard legitimate journalism, and to distinguis­h between, for example, terrorist propaganda on the one hand and the reputable coverage of atrocities on the other. If they don’t, Ofcom will be there to force them.’

A news industry source said: ‘The news publishers exemption is very welcome, but we believe that there should be an automatic exemption, without room for argument and backed by heavy penalties.’ cent) of those who voted Remain. And when the UK’s approach to the crisis is compared to that of France and Germany, Mr Johnson wins with ease: 45 per cent think the UK’s response has been better than that of French President Emmanuel Macron – only 16 per cent think it was worse – while 36 per cent say it was better than German Chancellor Angela Merkel (20 per cent say it’s been worse).

The 57 per cent of people who think that the Government is doing the right thing with Covid is the highest figure since May last year.

The vast majority of people – 85 per cent – say that they have closely followed the Covid rules over the last 12 months, with fewer than one in 20 saying they have not been following them at all.

A large majority, 72 per cent, support new £5,000 fines for people who travel abroad without good reason, with 69 per cent, supporting a total ban on people travelling abroad before the rules are potentiall­y lifted on May 17.

After a year of restrictio­ns, twothirds of people say that they ‘really need a holiday’.

Deltapoll interviewe­d 1,610 adults online between March 25 and 27, 2021 and weighted the data to be representa­tive of the adult population as a whole.

 ??  ?? ‘Ere you are, guv… Rodney Hoskins has definitely ’ad his Astrid Zenknicker­s jab. Signed Matt ’Ancock. That’ll be twenty quid… Next!’
‘Ere you are, guv… Rodney Hoskins has definitely ’ad his Astrid Zenknicker­s jab. Signed Matt ’Ancock. That’ll be twenty quid… Next!’

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