This appeared last week…
Government introduces laws to protect Australians from online misinformation
Communications Minister Michelle Rowland is planning to introduce laws that will give Australia’s media watchdog the ability to retract information from the world’s most powerful tech companies if they fail to meet standards of a voluntary misinformation and disinformation code of practice.
The previous government, under then communications minister Paul Fletcher, attempted to introduce the same laws but did not do so before the 2022 federal election.
“Misinformation and disinformation poses a threat to the safety and wellbeing of Australians, as well as to our democracy, society and economy,” Rowland said. “A new and graduated set of powers will enable the [Australian Communications and Media Authority] to monitor efforts and compel digital platforms to do more, placing Australia at the forefront in tackling harmful online misinformation and disinformation.”
Under the proposed laws, which are expected to be legislated by the end of this year, the ACMA will have the power legally to request information from tech platforms such as Meta, Google and Twitter such as data on complaints handling and how they manage the spread of harmful content.
The ACMA will also be able to register and enforce new codes or industry standards, should voluntary efforts prove inadequate. This could include measures such as stronger tools to empower users to identify and report harmful content online.
Plans to give the media regulator more power come almost two years after the lobby group of the tech sector, DIGI, introduced a voluntary code of practice on disinformation and misinformation. Under the code, misinformation is defined as false or misleading information that is likely to cause harm, while disinformation is false or misleading information that is distributed by users via spam and bots.
The voluntary code was established at the request of the federal government following the release of an inquiry into the market power of digital platforms and was signed by tech companies including Google, Meta, Twitter, Microsoft and viral video site TikTok. In 2021, after the code was introduced, a report by the ACMA found 82 per cent of Australians had experienced misinformation about COVID-19 in the previous 18 months. This was exacerbated again with the proliferation of harmful content when Russia invaded Ukraine.
Sunita Bose, managing director of DIGI, welcomed the government’s plans.
“DIGI is committed to driving improvements in the management of mis- and disinformation in Australia, demonstrated through our track record of work with signatory companies to develop and strengthen the industry code,” Bose said.
Plans to give the media regulator more power in the fight against tech platforms is just one of several initiatives that Rowland has under way. She is also reviewing Australia’s broadcasting services act and the anti-siphoning scheme – which determines which major cultural and sports events should be available to the public on free-to-air television – and media diversity laws.
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There is also coverage here:
Digital platforms warned: tackle disinformation or face regulation
By Richard Chirgwin on Jan 20, 2023 12:40PM
ACMA to receive code-making powers.
If major digital platforms don’t deal with harmful online disinformation, they will be made subject to regulation and a mandatory industry code, the federal government has warned.
The government said an exposure draft of legislation giving the Australian Communications and Media Authority regulatory power over platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and TikTok will be released during the first half of this year.
Authorised electoral content and what the government calls “professional news” will be exempt from the code.
The ACMA will be given the power to gather information and keep records of platforms’ efforts to combat disinformation, to make the platforms’ response to disinformation more transparent.
If the regulator decides those efforts – such as the voluntary code put together by the Digital Industry Group (DIGI) – are inadequate, it will have the power to create a mandatory code, communications minister Michelle Rowland said in a media statement.
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Also there is some malevolent misinformation around!
‘So far from science’: GPs desperate to debunk sexual health myths on social media
General practitioner and women’s health expert Dr Magdalena Simonis said many teenagers and women in their 20s and 30s are seeing misleading information on social media, at times resulting in unwanted pregnancies and requests for surgery on their genitals.
“Influencers are seeing themselves as changemakers or social commentators, but they don’t realise that the impact they’re having is actually pretty significant,” Simonis said. “It’s so far removed from science.”
A US study published in Health Communication last week found that popular influencers were promoting unreliable – and often inaccurate – health advice at an alarming rate, triggering concerns among clinicians that more impressionable young people would suffer adverse health events, including unwanted pregnancies, STIs and self-esteem issues.
The most common myth Simonis has heard at her clinic is that the oral contraceptive pill – one of the most researched medications in Australia – causes breast cancer. Although the pill “is associated with a small increased risk of breast cancer while a woman is currently using it,” according to Cancer Australia, it also reduces the risk of endometrial and ovarian cancer.
“There has been a whole swath of young women avoiding oral contraception on the basis that they just want to be ‘all natural’ and don’t want to have any hormones affecting them,” said Simonis.
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Overall we still seem to be struggling with management of misinformation, both ignorant and deliberate!
Without more investment and smarts I can’t see much change in the level of deception and misinformation out there!
Does anyone have some killer suggestions to clean things up?
David.
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