Albuquerque Journal

UK kids may get the right to delete social media info

Candidate includes policy in platform

- BY ROBERT HUTTON AND GILES TURNER

LONDON — Social media platforms including Facebook and Twitter could be forced to offer British young people the right to delete informatio­n about them if Theresa May is re-elected prime minister June 8.

Users under 18 will be able to request the removal of all records relating to them. The measure is one of a series that May’s Conservati­ve Party will promise in its election manifesto, due to be published next week. It aims to protect children online and make it easier for businesses to set up and operate on the web.

May proposes tighter rules for how the companies deal with hate speech, pornograph­y and illegal content and she wants to empower regulators to fine companies. There will be restrictio­ns on how companies store data and users will be able to access informatio­n about them.

The move from the U.K. government to require social networks to delete personal data goes far beyond existing requiremen­ts. Social networks such as Facebook and Twitter are a trove of informatio­n, with platforms storing years of personal details, from posts to photos. Google has been pushing back against European rulings around the right to be forgotten.

“The Internet has brought a wealth of opportunit­y but also significan­t new risks which have evolved faster than society’s response to them,” May said in an emailed statement. “We want social media companies to do more to help redress the balance and will take action to make sure they do.”

Spokespeop­le from Twitter, Google Inc., or Snapchat Inc. did not respond to request for comment. Facebook declined to comment.

This month, Home Secretary Amber Rudd warned Facebook, Alphabet Inc.’s Google, and Twitter to improve monitoring of extremist and hate content. She was responding to Parliament’s cross-party Home Affairs Committee, which said the companies are “shamefully” far from having done enough to deal with illegal and dangerous content.

Within the EU, attempts by individual­s to ask search engines to stop linking to unwanted content is currently processed on a case by case basis. If Google refuses, then citizens can appeal. The EU General Data Protection Regulation, which comes into force in May next year, will give individual­s more control over their data.

But as well as urging companies to improve their behavior, the Conservati­ves are offering to encourage people to do more business online.

Companies will be able to insist on a digital signature, with the government supporting the developmen­t of digital forms of identifica­tion. Customers will get the right to cancel contracts online and to clear, simple terms and conditions for online services.

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