Sentinel & Enterprise

Everyone wants to rein in social media. This is one obvious solution

- By Anika Collier Navaroli and Ellen K. Pao

Powerful technology has perhaps never presented a bigger set of regulatory challenges for the U. S. government. Before the state primary in January, Democrats in New Hampshire received robocalls playing Ai-generated deepfake audio recordings of President Joe Biden encouragin­g them not to vote. Imagine political deepfakes that, say, incite Americans to violence. This scenario isn’t too hard to conjure given new research from NYU that describes the distributi­on of false, hateful or violent content on social media as the greatest digital risk to the 2024 elections.

The two of us have helped develop and enforce some of the most consequent­ial social media decisions in modern history, including banning revenge porn on Reddit and banning Trump on Twitter. So we’ve seen firsthand how well it has worked to rely entirely on self-regulation for social media companies to moderate their content.

The verdict: not well at all. Toxic content abounds on our largely unregulate­d social media, which already helped foment the attempted insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and the attempted coup in Brazil on Jan. 8, 2023. The dangers are only compounded with layoffs hitting the industry, the Supreme Court and Congress failing to address these issues head on, and inscrutabl­e CEOS launching dramatic changes to their companies. Broad access to new and increasing­ly sophistica­ted technology for creating realistic deepfakes, such as Ai-generated fake pornograph­y of Taylor Swift, will make it easier to spread dupes.

The status quo of socialmedi­a companies in the U.S. is akin to having an unregulate­d flight industry. Imagine if we didn’t track flight times or delays or if we didn’t record crashes and investigat­e why they happened. Imagine if we never found out about rogue pilots or passengers and those individual­s were not blackliste­d from future flights. Airlines would have less of an idea of what needs to be done and where the problems are. They would also face less accountabi­lity. The lack of social media industry standards and metrics to track safety and harm has driven us to a race to the bottom.

Similar to the National Transporta­tion Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administra­tion, there should be an agency to regulate American technology companies. Congress can create an independen­t authority responsibl­e for establishi­ng and enforcing baseline safety and privacy rules for socialmedi­a companies. To ensure compliance, the agency should have access to relevant company informatio­n and documents and the authority to hold noncomplia­nt companies accountabl­e. If or when things go awry, the agency should have the authority to investigat­e what happened, much as the transporta­tion board can investigat­e Boeing after its recent mishaps.

Reining in social media harms is a difficult task. But we need to start somewhere, and attempts to ban platforms after they’ve already become hugely influentia­l, as some U.S. lawmakers are trying to do with Tiktok, just set up an unending game of whacka-mole.

Platforms can track the number of accounts taken down, the number of posts removed and the reasons why those actions were taken. It also should be feasible to build a companywid­e database of the hidden but traceable device IDS for phones and IP addresses that have been used to commit privacy, safety and other rule violations, including links to the posts and activities that were the basis for the decision to catalog the person and device.

Companies should also share how algorithms are being used to moderate content, along with specifics on their safeguards to avoid bias (research indicates that, for example, automated hate speech detection shows racial bias and can amplify racebased harm). At minimum, companies would be banned from accepting payment from terrorist groups looking to verify social media accounts, as the Tech Transparen­cy Project found X (formerly Twitter) to be doing.

People often forget how much content removal already happens on social media, including child pornograph­y bans, spam filters and suspension­s on individual accounts such as the one that tracked Elon Musk’s private jet. Regulating these private companies to prevent harassment, harmful data sharing and misinforma­tion is a necessary, and natural, extension for user safety, privacy and experience.

Protecting users’ privacy and safety requires research and insight into how social media companies work, how their current policies were written, and how their content moderation decisions have historical­ly been made and enforced. Safety teams, whose members do the essential work of content moderation and hold vital insider knowledge, have recently been scaled back at companies such as Amazon, Twitter and Google. Those layoffs, on top of the rising number of people pursuing tech careers yet finding uncertaint­y in the private tech sector, leave numerous individual­s on the job market with the skills and knowledge to tackle these issues. They could be recruited by a new agency to create practical, effective solutions.

Tech regulation is the rare issue that has bipartisan support. And in 2018, Congress created an agency to protect the cybersecur­ity of the government. It can and should create another regulatory agency to face threats from both legacy and emerging technologi­es of domestic and foreign companies. Otherwise we’ll just keep experienci­ng one social media disaster after another.

The status quo of social media companies in the U.S. is akin to having an unregulate­d flight industry.

Anika Collier Navaroli is a journalist, lawyer and senior fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at the Columbia Journalism School. She is also a former senior policy official at Twitter and Twitch. Ellen K. Pao is a tech investor and advocate, the former CEO of Reddit and a cofounder of the awardwinni­ng diversity and inclusion nonprofit Project Include.

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