-
This document sheds light on TikTok’s research and content moderation policies linked to disinformation.
-
Deepfakes that defame political opponents and calls to vote on platforms where political advertising is officially banned: in the super election year of 2024, several instances showed that major digital […]
-
On 17 February 2024, the Digital Services Act (DSA) became fully applicable in Europe. The DSA’s new approach fundamentally reshapes the regulation and liability of platforms in Europe, and promises […]
-
Tech billionaire Elon Musk’s surprise bid to buy Twitter questions the wisdom of the current EU efforts to combat the spread of disinformation, which has relied to a large extend […]
-
The European Media Freedom Act proposal takes aim at very large online platforms’ gatekeeping power over access to media content and aims to reshape the relationship between media and platforms. […]
-
Last Friday, YouTube announced that it ‘will stop removing content that advances false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches occurred in the 2020 and other past US Presidential elections’. […]
-
Who decides what counts as “disinformation” in the EU? Not public authorities, because disinformation is not directly sanctioned in the Digital Service Act (DSA) or other secondary legislation. Nor Very […]
-
This second report prepared by the Centre for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom (CMPF) for EDMO offers a summary of the iterative process of developing structural indicators for the Code […]
-
The European Commission (EC) has recognised the exposure of citizens to online disinformation and micro-targeting of voters based on the unlawful processing of personal data as one of the major […]
-
The Online Safety Act (OSA) has now become law, marking a significant milestone in platform regulation in the United Kingdom. The OSA introduces fresh obligations for technology firms to address […]