Twitter risks EU ire over incomplete disinformation report

Firm was only tech platform not to complete EU report under voluntary code of practice

Twitter was the only tech firm not to submit a complete report on how it is tackling disinformation. Photograph: Jim Wilson/The New York Times
Twitter was the only tech firm not to submit a complete report on how it is tackling disinformation. Photograph: Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Twitter was the only tech platform that did not send a complete report to the European Union detailing how it was tackling disinformation, a move that risks angering regulators.

Twitter’s report was short of data and didn’t include commitments from the social media company that it would empower fact-checkers, the EU’s executive arm said Thursday in a statement.

“I am disappointed to see that Twitter’s report lags behind others and I expect a more serious commitment to their obligations,” wrote vice-president Vera Jourova, who is in charge of values of transparency for the European Commission.

Internal market commissioner Thierry Breton, who recently spoke with Twitter owner Elon Musk about following the EU’s rules, didn’t reference the company directly, but said that “it comes as no surprise that the degree of quality varies greatly according to the resources companies have allocated to this project”.

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The report, part of the EU’s voluntary code of practice on disinformation, details how companies are working to reduce the spread of misinformation such as that pushed by bots about Covid-19 and the number of political ads that were rejected. Twitter signed on to follow the code before Mr Musk took over the company late last year, and agreed to submit an updated report every six months.

While companies aren’t required to participate, not complying fully could put Twitter on a bad track with regulators, especially as companies get ready to implement a wide range of content moderation rules in the upcoming Digital Services Act (DSA) by September 1st. Failing to follow the DSA could cost a company fines of as much as 6 per cent of its annual revenue or even prompt the commission to ban a platform altogether.

Twitter will almost certainly qualify as a “very large” online platform, requiring the company to address harmful content and submit annual risk assessments to the commission. Mr Musk’s massive job cuts at Twitter – including the exodus of the company’s entire Brussels office – have raised concerns about whether the company will be able to make the necessary changes to comply with the EU’s rules.

An email seeking comment on the disinformation report was sent to Twitter’s press email, but wasn’t immediately returned.

Since taking over, Mr Musk has already made a number of changes to the platform that alter the way it tackles misinformation, including eliminating its Covid-19 misinformation policy and cutting teams working on these issues.

He has made a point of promoting a little-known feature called Community Notes, which asks fact-checking volunteers to add more context to misleading or incorrect tweets, but the current design has limitations around misinformation that is politically polarising.

Twitter is also ending free access to their APIs, which has allowed academic researchers to study the company. Now researchers will likely have to pay to obtain this information. – Bloomberg