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Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Twitter Agree to Australia's Misinformation-Fighting Code (zdnet.com) 164

ZDNet reports: A handful of technology giants operating in Australia have agreed on a code of practice that aims to stem disinformation on their respective platforms. All signatories — Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Redbubble, TikTok, and Twitter — have committed to the Australian Code of Practice on Disinformation and Misinformation. They have also committed to releasing an annual transparency report about their efforts under the code...

[The Code] provides seven guiding principles, with the first aimed at protecting freedom of expression. "Signatories should not be compelled by governments or other parties to remove content solely on the basis of its alleged falsity if the content would not otherwise be unlawful," the code said. Another is centred on protecting user privacy and notes that any actions taken by digital platforms to address the propagation of disinformation and misinformation should not contravene commitments they have made to respect the privacy of Australian users...

"Empowering users" is another principle, that is to enable users to make informed choices about digital media content that purports to be a source of authoritative current news or of factual information. Signatories also commited to supporting independent researchers and having policies and processes concerning advertising placements implemented.

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Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Twitter Agree to Australia's Misinformation-Fighting Code

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  • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @04:47AM (#61089002)

    to investigate mysterious disappearances of swimmers; report expected "soon".

    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      "to investigate mysterious disappearances of swimmers;"

      Is this a reference to Harold Holt ?

      • by larwe ( 858929 )
        Hey, I learned to swim at the Harold Holt Swimming Center in Melbourne nearly 40 years ago :P Still have yet to encounter a Chinese submarine while swimming at the beach, however.
    • just like the gaming industry did with the ESRB. Nobody's going to want the gov't regulating them, so they'll do everything they can to self regulate so long as it doesn't bite heavily into profits.

      That said, it'll come down to how profitable the misinformation is. While the ESRB worked (more or less) it didn't stop or slow video game sales, it just meant they couldn't do much more sex/violence then you see on late night TV (or else they couldn't sell their games in Walmart, which is more or less a deat
      • You are looking at what is going on with micro-transactions, not what is actually possible.

        When I was a child, people routinely put nickles and dimes into machines to do micro transactions. Typically for a phone call (before cell phones), a piece of gum, or a small toy.

        Even today, some apps cost $2.00. If that is all they ever charge, it is a valid micro-transaction, in my opinion. It is clearly possible for people to make non-abusive micro-transactions.

        The problem is in part due to Apple and Google.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        However it does effectively shift power from the courts to decide the truth, to a cabal of agreeing corporations to define the truth. It allows that cabal of corporations to punish as nobodies in what ever fiscal way they choose and then we have to PROVE OUR INNOCENCE to end that financial harm how ever many years it takes. Corporate defined guilt, until the citizen proves their innocence.

        I prefer a system where ONLY THE COURTS define the truth. Where evidence is public presented and judged for it's worth.

  • Wow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Twinbee ( 767046 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @04:51AM (#61089012)
    Time to sell my Ministry of Truth shares. I think we have a new market leader, working together for the common good! You better believe it!!
    • Time to sell my Ministry of Truth shares

      Ah, a tyranny reference ... yeah, you are badly misinformed about the way a dystopian tyranny works.

      I think we have a new market leader, working together for the common good! You better believe it!!

      Huh?

      • Time to sell my Ministry of Truth shares

        Ah, a tyranny reference ... yeah, you are badly misinformed about the way a dystopian tyranny works.

        Why are you picking on transvestites? Ohh, sorry - I read that as a "dystopian tranny".

        never mind

    • Re:Wow (Score:4, Funny)

      by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @05:45AM (#61089144)
      Ah yes because having social media sign up to a code to actually crack down on orchestrated misinformation by bots is exactly the same as 1984.
      • by Twinbee ( 767046 )
        When it's coordinated with the government, than absolutely.

        Slashdot used to be incredibly free speech 10 years ago. What happened?
        • by DrXym ( 126579 )
          Somebody hasn't read 1984 or understands its themes.
          • Somebody hasn't read 1984 or understands its themes.

            No, he is simply labouring under the delusion that while government is always dishonest and corrupt, private corporations are without exception the wellspring of all honesty and morality in the universe.

        • Re:Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Jarwulf ( 530523 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @07:22AM (#61089376)

          Slashdot used to be incredibly free speech 10 years ago. What happened?

          The left was free speech when it was out of power. Now that it is in power not so much. I guess it isn't too surprising when you think about it. Aside from simply common sense schoolyard aphorisms about power and corruption and the deceptiveness of many idealistic people, this is just the latest example in a very welltrod path in history of leftwingers cutting lose in a matter of speaking whenever they take on the reins. From the French, to turn of the century Mexico, to Russia its absolutely uncanny how often its happened...it must be like some weird psychogenetic thing.

          • Re:Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

            by inode_buddha ( 576844 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @07:49AM (#61089416) Journal

            The left is in power? News to me. Democrats are wholly owned by corporate america, same as Republicans. They are anything *but* left wing. Look at how they've acted and voted. Never mind their words. When Clinton deregulated everything he could, was that a left-wing stance? When Obama bailed out Wall St and left everyone else twisting in the wind, that was a left wing position? How come the Republicans didn't fight those moves tooth and nail? Why haven't they done everything possible to reverse those things?

            • Re:Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

              by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @09:27AM (#61089598)

              Actual conservatives would have let the big three go under along with the big banks. The free market showed their business plans didn't work. Foreign auto makers and smaller banks had zero problems.

            • Let me help you with some definitions:

              Right: Extreme right election overthrowing corrupt government hell bent on selling out America to anyone who will buy.
              Left: Election winning corrupt government willing to sell out America to those with big checkbooks and offering more jobs (or economy, or whatever the word du jour is). Also slightly left on the political spectrum compared to the right, and they're coming for your guns.
              Bernie: Actually slightly left, otherwise known as a dangerous socialist, hell bent on

            • by quenda ( 644621 )

              Democrats are wholly owned by corporate america, same as Republicans.

              They are establishment, certainly. There is a real left wing in America, in academia most prominently, and they abandoned free speech a lot more than 10 years ago. (cancel culture, safe spaces etc.) But while their ideology may be often far from evidence-based, they do not seem to be guilty of the outright lies and conspiracy theories that are flooding the internet. They sort-of see unfounded conspiracies against blacks or women, but at least they have some historical basis in reality. You can draw

          • Re:Wow (Score:5, Insightful)

            by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday February 22, 2021 @10:02AM (#61089670) Homepage Journal

            The left was free speech when it was out of power. Now that it is in power not so much.

            The left barely exists and has only notional influence in our government today. Biden is a centrist, not a leftist, and is already backing off from all of his leftist campaign promises. He ran on getting "stimulus" (read: relief) checks out "immediately" but that hasn't happened, has it? But he's made sure to get pork moving to Raytheon, one of his donors. He's backed off from the $15 minimum wage and from meaningful student loan forgiveness as well.

            Historically, when Democrats control congress they dick around and accomplish very little. When Republicans control it they link arms and march in lock step, and run right over freedoms. But both are parties of corporate whoredom. They both represent corporations, not us. There are only a few senators and reps who behave otherwise. I leave it as an exercise to the reader to examine voting records and decide who's who.

            • Historically, when Democrats control congress they dick around and accomplish very little.

              My observation is that Conservatives tend to share a lot more common values, eg God, Country, Constitution, individual rights etc. Whereas Liberals are a loose collective of special interest groups that all want different things eg Socialists, Hippies, LGBT, Immigrants etc. So when Liberals are in opposition they all gang up on Conservatives. When Liberals are in power they all split back into their special interest factions and never achieve anything.

              When Republicans control it they link arms and march in lock step, and run right over freedoms.

              The idea that Conservatives run over freedoms is at odds

          • The left was free speech when it was out of power. Now that it is in power not so much. I guess it isn't too surprising when you think about it.

            It's astonishing how quickly the turnaround happened. I would respond by voting Republican every time, but the Republicans unfortunately haven't really changed.

        • Slashdot used to be incredibly free speech 10 years ago. What happened?

          Because there are different levels of what constitutes "free speech"

          Some of those people who were incredibly free speech supported things like death threats, threats of violence or deliberate falsehoods, any thing that promotes harm as free speech.

          Certainly, the First amendment does not say anything of the sort:

          Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people pe

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            This is pretty simple. No official religion. No prohibition of free exercise of religion. No laws against the freedom of speech. This means the government cant arrest you for what you say. No laws against the free press, or assembly, and allowing complaints to be made against the government.

            It just means no statutory (legislated) laws against speech, the press and religion, by the Federal legislature. It left it to the individual States whether they wanted to allow removal of those rights, most all did have similar in their Constitutions.
            More importantly, it left it to the courts to be able to ban speech, regulate the press, and even religions, under the common law, including a Judge being able to order your imprisonment for breaking their order, eg contempt.
            This meant you could ask a Judge to

          • Re:Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

            by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @03:19PM (#61090748) Journal

            If the censorship is designed to suppress ideas (rather than a particular expression of the idea), then it's absolutely bad.

            • If the censorship is designed to suppress ideas (rather than a particular expression of the idea), then it's absolutely bad.

              That's a pretty good metric.

      • Re:Wow (Score:4, Funny)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @06:04AM (#61089168) Homepage Journal

        In fact in Orwell's world the social media platforms would be the good guys here. What he was afraid of was fascists putting out false information and lies, with no means to combat them. A major theme in Nineteen Eighty Four is that misinformation goes unchallenged, and is practically impossible to challenge.

        A lot of people mistakenly think that the book is about censorship. It's not, it's about how persistent lies and misinformation are a tool of fascism. Orwell was an anti-fascist, he fought them voluntarily and even got shot in the process.

        • by Jarwulf ( 530523 )
          Yeah Orwell would be all for centralized government/corpo control over information and truth as the appointed gatekeeper. When I read the books its so obvious now! lol. And they call Qanon crazy.
          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Well the law does specifically say that just having the government object to something or claim it is false is not enough of a reason to remove it, so...

            I think generally speaking Orwell would approve of platforms like Twitter, because for the most part they give ordinary people a voice and make it harder for governments and corporations to control the narrative. Remember that he used to work for various newspapers, he was well aware of how the traditional publishing industry acted as a gatekeeper. The smal

          • by DrXym ( 126579 )
            Read what they're opting into. It's not centralized government / corpo control. It basically amounts to properly removing inauthentic actors like bot armies from their platform, demonetizing / deplatforming those using it for financial gain and giving users reporting tools.
        • by DrXym ( 126579 )
          He was anti-totalitarian, regardless of political slant. He had his own personal experiences from the other end of the spectrum, nearly avoiding arrest (and inevitable execution) by communists for "high treason".

          Anyway I'm not sure what the hell he'd make of social media. He was in favour of a free press and free expression and would not doubt embrace the idea of that. But I doubt he would have anything positive to say about the crap that bots push which is essentially just gray / black propaganda.

        • by DeplorableCodeMonkey ( 4828467 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @09:13AM (#61089564)

          A lot of people mistakenly think that the book is about censorship. It's not, it's about how persistent lies and misinformation are a tool of fascism. Orwell was an anti-fascist, he fought them voluntarily and even got shot in the process.

          A lot of left-leaning people today seem to think the book was about Fascism, when it was a directed attack on Soviet Communism--particularly the Stalinist variety. This should be obvious since Animal Farm was also an in-your-face indictment of the hypocrisy of Communism in practice in a way that would be easily understood by children.

          Yes, Orwell was anti-Fascist, but he was an anti-Communist Socialist even more so. That's why he was so passionately hated by the hard left. He was a Democratic Socialist and saw the hard left for the completely-fungible-with-Fascism that it was and still is today.

        • A lot of people mistakenly think that the book is about censorship. It's not, it's about how persistent lies and misinformation are a tool of fascism.

          Censorship and oppression of opposition are also a tools of Fascism. .

          Orwell was an anti-fascist, he fought them voluntarily and even got shot in the process.

          Yes and his literary work was to point out the fascist tendencies of Marxism, an idea completely lost on Antifa idiots who run around wearing hammer and sickle logos, burning down buildings and shutting down opposing voices.

  • So this is an attempt to show virtue to Australia, which is otherwise pushing them on news payments, while attempting to pre-empt the Biden administration's focus on social media's role in fanning extremism and untruths. The attempt to make themselves unculpable for spreading obvious untruths is a bit transparent, regardless of what is ethical. Interesting how these companies have become powerful enough to attempt to cherry pick which national government to adhere to while simultaneously suggesting that the

  • by ThatGype ( 5884680 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @06:05AM (#61089170)
    Excellent. I used to stress over all the different opinions and open debates out there, but now finally the government has stepped up! These companies no doubt will call on their corpus of experts in every conceivable human field to settle every matter, and we'll have the end of our strivings met with only The Final and Ultimate Truth.

    The dawn of a new enlightenment beckons! Silence the heretics, no sorry I mean dissenters, actually no I mean disinformation spreaders!
    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @10:57AM (#61089870)
      you'd have a problem with that, right? So why does nobody have a problem with me posting the same in reverse. e.g. when Joe Rogan goes on air and says he'll wait 6 months to see if the Vaccine is safe, when the trials were done over a year ago and there's 40,000 people who've had it for longer than that plus millions more who just got it...

      And you can at least make the argument that Rogan's just profoundly ignorant. He's a multi-multi-millionaire, there's no excuse, he can hire fact checkers like John Oliver does, but yeah, you can at least make the argument. But I don't think anyone believes Donald Trump, with the resources he has regarding the election results, is arguing in good faith.

      People lie. Those lies can and will do harm. I'm fucking tired of pretending that every point of view has merit and deserves equal time. There are ideas that cannot and should not be entertained. And there are sick bastards out there who will do that for profit at the expense of us all.
      • I'm fucking tired of pretending that every point of view has merit and deserves equal time.

        Believe me, I hate bs too. But the only way we can decide what is and what isn't is with free speech and open debate. Bad ideas can eventually be refuted that way. When there is control over what is said and when, it takes much longer for that to happen. If ever.

        Point in case, we're having this discussion now and I think it is very edifying. You chose to participate. Imagine if you couldn't.

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by eaglesrule ( 4607947 )

          Point in case, we're having this discussion now and I think it is very edifying. You chose to participate. Imagine if you couldn't.

          For leftists, there is a perpetual state of denial for the consequences of their own demands for censorship and policing other's speech.

          Even despite real world examples, for them there's no possible connection between removing 'covid miracle cures', and having unflattering news about a politician being censored for political reasons.

          They will complain bitterly about the corpocracy, and in the next breath demand corporate gatekeepers should be trusted to flex their power for our own good.

  • by 278MorkandMindy ( 922498 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @06:34AM (#61089258)

    " not be forced to remove content solely on the basis of its alleged falsity "

    So misinformation is fine? What am I missing...

    • not be forced to remove content solely on the basis of its alleged falsity "

      They don't have to pull something down just because someone claims it is false. Some credible proof would be needed it is wrong/false to get the story/paper/study/review taken down.

      Otherwise it would be a great way for a corporation to smother an news letter or blog from an environmental web site that reported finding evidence of the corporations illegal dumping of something.

      I might be wrong but that is how I read it.

      • Ok, I see that now.

        I also see that any lawyer can use that kind of statement to basically say anything that is not absolutely irrefutable must stay up.

        Or people can just say "In my opinion ..." which makes it impossible to say it is false, as they can claim they really believe it.

        Hopefully I am just being a cynic.

        • by larwe ( 858929 )
          By the time a lawyer is involved, it is too late. Free speech can't be "free, as long as you're willing to pay thousands of dollars in legal fees to exercise your rights every time someone more powerful disagrees with you". Make no mistake, this is 100% a censorship tool designed to prevent the masses from being exposed to anything outside of the approved message on (whatever). There is no need for a Great Firewall of Australia if everyone outside Australia agrees to suppress online talk that's not in line
    • "What am I missing."

      There is an underlying problem in that fact and opinion are conflated. It is conceivable to agree on the facts of a matter, for examples the efficacy of masks and draw different conclusions (opinion) on whether they are worthwhile (I think they are). In general "I think" is a flag that someone is about to present an opinion as fact.

      Similarly, we don't *know* what Mr. Trump's intent was in his speeches and tweets with regard to what became the Jan 6 invasion of Capital Hill. We have opini

    • In practice, I doubt the "misinformation" designation will have much to do with whether it's true or false. I think it will be primarily decided on whether it cuts against their agenda or not. It's newspeak.
    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Read as: we will provide you with a number of fact checkers that align with our political ideas, they will tell you what is truth.

  • Redbubble? Convince me you're a real thing.
  • by kaptink ( 699820 ) on Monday February 22, 2021 @07:47AM (#61089412) Homepage

    I'm a bit confused at why they are pushing a policy of preventing "Disinformation and Misinformation" while at the same time fighting for the likes of Rupert Murdoch? Those two are almost completely mutually exclusive.

    Currently there is a countrywide ban on posting news publications/stories and my facebook feed appears to have never looked better. Back to cat memes, holiday validation photos and friends new babies. Yay!

  • Flat Earthers

    The Easter Bunny

    Santa Claus

    All religions on the planet...

  • This is a little sus - Code will not apply to government content, political advertising

    I understand there are policies in place already that cover some of this. But why bother excluding them?

  • "The code [PDF] was prepared by the Digital Industry Group Inc (DiGi), a non-profit industry association advocating for the digital industry in Australia."

    https://digi.org.au/about/ [digi.org.au] - Members include... Facebook, Google, Twitter. Though not Microsoft.

    So really this headline should be "Facebook, Google and Twitter agree to abide by a misinformation-fighting code they wrote via a proxy organisation."

    Ok, so what's in the code itsself? I don't know. I've tried to read it, but it's dense and what little I can fi

  • All I want is for these companies to flag any posting that's political in nature and allow me to filter out friends' political postings while letting the "look at what I'm eating for lunch" postings through. Is that too much to ask?

  • Software that blocks usage for not agreeing to the terms of service, what a crazy new concept!

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