“Public officials in Washington for years have sparred along partisan lines over whether social media platforms take down too much or too little hate speech and misinformation,” reports the Washington Post’s politics/tech newsletter, The Technology 202.
“A council launching this week aims to sidestep those disputes by proposing reforms that tackle issues of bipartisan concern, including children’s safety and national security.”
The newly minted Council for Responsible Social Media, set up by the nonpartisan nonprofit Issue One, features a wide-ranging and influential lineup of former U.S. lawmakers and federal officials, advocates, scholars, industry leaders and whistleblowers… “This is not a think tank. This is an action tank,” former Democratic House majority leader Dick Gephardt told The Technology 202. “We want to see results….”
“The core goal of the commission is to really show that there are bipartisan paths forward … that involve having companies have to actually talk about what is their role in society,” Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen said in an interview. Haugen said the council can move the debate around social media accountability forward by focusing on areas of “common ground,” like concerns around algorithmic amplification, transparency and platform design choices. Haugen said proposals the council might explore include giving users, particularly children, the option to “reset algorithms” so they do not keep wandering down the same risky “rabbit holes.” By focusing on systemic issues, she said, the group might be able to help build support for ideas that sidestep thorny speech debates. The council may also rally around legislation that already has bipartisan support, such as recent Senate bills on kids’ online safety and platform transparency, Haugen said….
The council is also poised to shine a brighter spotlight on how U.S. companies may be playing into the hands of foreign adversaries — scrutiny that has largely focused on TikTok, owned by Beijing-based tech giant ByteDance…. Haugen said one concept the group may explore is requiring “consistent reporting” by companies about how much they are investing to counter foreign influence operations.
The Platform Accountability and Transparency Act (introduced in 2021) “would require social media firms to comply with researcher data requests for external audits,” reports the Guardian. “Under the proposed law, failure to do so could result in loss of legal protections for content hosted on their platform.”
“There are a number of large opportunities today that were not on the table a year ago in terms of moving forward in a bipartisan way,” Haugen told the Guardian. “They just need a push over the finish line.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – New ‘Council for Responsible Social Media’ Seeks Bipartisan Reforms