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Free Speech

U.K. Politicians Target Social Media To Deflect From Riots and Civil Unrest

As Britain grapples with riots, politicians shift focus to “holding tech accountable” by pushing for censorship and sidestepping the deeper issues fueling the chaos.

Robert Winterton | 8.9.2024 2:50 PM

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A protestor holds a sign that reads, "IMMIGRANTS ARE NOT THE REASON YOUR LIFE SUCKS - IT'S SELF-SERVING POLITICIANS!" | News Images/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(News Images/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

As riots rock the streets of cities across Britain, some Members of Parliament (MPs) are trying to blame social media—they do not want government policy on issues such as immigration, policing, and social services to be at the center of the discussion about the country's civil unrest. Instead, they argue that these riots are primarily fueled by discussions happening on social media and are using the opportunity to advocate for restrictions on U.K. citizens' speech and access to information. 

MPs want social media companies to ban user accounts accused of inciting violence, and they have criticized these companies for not following such instructions previously. Labour MP Chris Curtis argued that social media bosses need to "step up and deal with vile messages stoking division and egging on violence." Similarly, Conservative and Shadow Home Secretary James Cleverly said it was "unacceptable for [social media companies] to take the profits but not comply with their responsibilities." Some MPs even want to haul X owner Elon Musk before a Parliamentary committee to explain the platform's "role in spreading misinformation."

Although not in effect until 2025, the U.K.'s Online Safety Act has been referenced as a vehicle to curtail allegedly harmful opinions that politicians say are fueling rioting. The controversial law sanctions sites if they host content that is potentially harmful to users. Ofcom, the British media regulatory body responsible for enforcing the act, has already warned social media companies to ensure compliance with existing and incoming laws about online speech, including their legal obligation to remove "hatred, disorder, provoking violence or certain instances of disinformation."

The Online Safety Act gives the U.K. government powerful control over digital discourse in the name of "safety." In the context of British civil unrest, it's clear we should all recognize just how easily well-intentioned policies to improve online safety can turn into expansive online censorship regimes. In the U.S., Senators Marsha Blackburn (R–Tenn.) and Richard Blumenthal (D–Conn.) are pushing the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA)—a proposal quite similar to the UK's Online Safety Act.

Making businesses liable for speech that is not their own is fraught with unintended consequences, especially for free speech. Imposing legal responsibility for the speech of private citizens onto those not actually speaking, in this case online platforms, strongly incentivizes those businesses to remove any content that could invite legal scrutiny.

Holding sites liable for the speech of their users is neither fair nor sensical. Let's be clear: the "vile messages" Curtis bemoans are the opinions of British citizens, not those of Facebook, X, or Telegram. Instead of addressing citizens' concerns about their policy choices, politicians are trying to shift the blame. Proposals to spread liability enable the government to frame these rules as merely "holding businesses accountable," allowing them control over online discourse without the messy optics of jailing citizens for wrongthink.

Without a First Amendment, U.K. citizens lack a reliable body of law to prevent the government from using legal action to force private media businesses to censor on its behalf.

As users increasingly turn to social media messaging rather than news feeds, making messaging apps like Telegram and WhatsApp liable for private conversations poses an even more alarming threat to the free flow of information online. Many proposals to "hold tech accountable" impact both traditional newsfeeds and direct messages. By holding them liable for the private messages of their users, messaging services would be forced to surveil the conversations of their users and water down the use of encryption—a key technology that protects the digital privacy and security of all internet users—to avoid government crackdowns. 

The once-global internet is fragmenting. Other governments across the world are asserting control over the digital realm with increasing boldness. Turkey recently banned Instagram for removing pro-Hamas content, while Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro urged supporters to ditch WhatsApp, fearing its use by dissenters. Such moves, once unthinkable, are now commonplace. The internet looks increasingly different depending on where you log on. 

Europe, including but not limited to the European Union, is sadly following this trend. They may reject certain values of countries like Turkey and Venezuela, but their approach to online information is similar. Their policymakers believe that the free flow of information online is a bug, not a feature. As a result, they want to force tech companies to filter out speech the government finds undesirable. 

In America, some politicians are drawing inspiration from European advocates of internet censorship. KOSA is just one of the proposals making progress in Congress that reflects the dangerous and un-American belief that free speech causes more harm than good.

While the First Amendment protects free speech in America, it hasn't stopped politicians from pushing government control over online discourse under the guise of child safety and combating misinformation. If enacted, these proposals could prompt courts to weaken America's fundamental free speech protection, all while failing to achieve their stated goals. The developing conversation about citizens' speech on social media and the riots in the U.K. demonstrates how quickly well-intentioned regulations can morph into regimes that undermine the core principles of a free society.

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NEXT: Venezuela's Repression Is Modeled on Horror Movies

Robert Winterton is the Director of Public Affairs for NetChoice, a trade organization dedicated to protecting free expression and free enterprise online. X and Meta, which owns WhatsApp, Instagram, and Facebook, are members of NetChoice.

Free SpeechUnited KingdomEuropeWorldCensorshipBig GovernmentProtestsSocial MediaImmigration
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  1. TJJ2000   10 months ago

    LOL. Don't you mean the USA?
    That's exactly what they're doing here.

    1. Zeb   10 months ago

      Not exactly. There they don't have to give lip service to the 1st amendment, so it's a lot easier.

      1. Mother's Lament   10 months ago

        Yeah, they don't have to waste time deliberately ignoring the constitution like the poor American pols do. So much useless effort in the States.

        1. Zeb   10 months ago

          They also aren't making mass arrests of people for making comments on twitter. Yes, I know there's the guy who got convicted for some supposed election interference by meme, which is terrible. But you're still not going to go to prison for expressing an opinion online in the US.

          1. Quicktown Brix   10 months ago

            It was nice while it lasted, but the tide is turning; the clock is ticking...tiktok tiktok

    2. Rick James   10 months ago

      I'm not sure anyone in the us has been arrested for a tweet. That's happened in the UK.

      1. TJJ2000   10 months ago

        Dinesh D'Souza, J6 protesters (that weren't even there), Trump... etc, etc, etc

        1. Vernon Depner   10 months ago

          Trump is facing charges for NOT tweeting.

      2. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   10 months ago

        Wasn't the "Vote for Hillary by text" meme imprisonment over a tweet?

  2. Longtobefree   10 months ago

    Fascists are going to do fascism.

    1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   10 months ago

      Stop using the word correctly. - jeffsarc

  3. A Thinking Mind   10 months ago

    In the context of British civil unrest, it's clear we should all recognize just how easily well-intentioned policies to improve online safety can turn into expansive online censorship regimes.

    This shit isn't well-intentioned, it's people in power leveraging that power to try to shut up people they don't like or disagree with.

    STOP GIVING THEM THE BENEFIT OF SAYING THEY HAVE GOOD INTENTIONS.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   10 months ago

      +

    2. Rick James   10 months ago

      This is what happens when we agree to disagree.

    3. JohnZ   10 months ago

      Correct. They don't have good intentions.

  4. A Thinking Mind   10 months ago

    As users increasingly turn to social media messaging rather than news feeds,

    And the reason people in Britain do this is likely because the media is either directly owned by the government, or else the government has a lot of influence on the output of the traditional media. They don't trust the traditional media so they're looking for alternative sources. The government generated this credibility crisis and is now trying to exacerbate it by shutting down even more "Wrongthink"

    They're just advancing further and further down the 1984 tech tree.

    1. Don't look at me!   10 months ago

      As users increasingly turn to social media messaging ..

      Do they mean X, (formerly twitter)?

    2. One-Punch_Man   10 months ago

      Unlike the US, oh wait...

  5. Idaho-Bob   10 months ago

    When you are facing 26 months for typing on a keyboard:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ClCMR58LV8

    1. Mother's Lament   10 months ago

      wOrDs aRe viOleNcE

      1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   10 months ago

        Just hoping it isnt solely a random contributor at Reason who realizes it this time. Maybe the rest of the salaried crew will notice this isn't about muh private companies. Governments are using their force to censor through companies.

        1. TJJ2000   10 months ago

          It is amazing how media has washed its hands of this massive concept.

          Reason itself took pride in obtaining the proof the US Administration was censoring Facebook yet all was said and forgotten within a week. UN-Addressed; short of SCOTUS making a statement that also went ignored.

      2. JohnZ   10 months ago

        Hey, think the time is right for violent revolution
        But where I live, the game to play is compromise solution

  6. MWAocdoc   10 months ago

    So let me see if I have this straight: if I participate in a discussion concerning police abuse of citizens and race riots occur after that, the discussion is what "triggered" or "fueled" those riots? Wow! And I thought Conservatives and Labour were equally bad ... maybe not ... maybe not ...

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   10 months ago

      Get woke! Your very existence (if you hold the wrong opinions or just have the wrong racial or gender characteristics) is a threat to the physical (i.e. emotional) safety of some snowflake somewhere, and therefore justifies state action against you. No actual discussion required.

  7. Super Scary   10 months ago

    I don't what it is, but the guy in the top photo just LOOKS British. Not sure if it's the wrinkly jacket or the 5-head.

    1. Mother's Lament   10 months ago

      He looks like Keith Richards weiner little brother.

  8. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   10 months ago

    UK police is now blocking foreign IPs from accessing government websites.

    https://x.com/JadenPMcNeil/status/1821648007257076089

    Amazing how the leftist globalist continue to adopt practices of authoritarian China.

    1. Idaho-Bob   10 months ago

      The Brits are threatening to arrest everyone who posts "hate" online.
      I find this amusing AF!

      https://x.com/EndWokeness/status/1821934374675206485

      1. A Thinking Mind   10 months ago

        Man, I really HATE the UK government! I can't express how much I HATE it when governments act like this. I would HATE to live there.

        1. JohnZ   10 months ago

          I hate Mark Rowley and I hate Curr Stammer and I hate third world savages.
          Oh yeah, I hate Winston Churchill and I hate the Royals.
          Cause summer's here and the time is right
          For street fightin' man

  9. Isaac Bartram   10 months ago

    According to Konstantin Kisin, writer, social commentator, comedian, and co-host of the free speech podcast “Triggernometry”, in 2018, Russia arrested 400 people for “online offenses”, the UK arrested 3,300.

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/GTn1He86oJk

    1. CE   10 months ago

      Because Russians know better than to criticize their government.
      Some British people thought they still had the rights and freedoms of Englishmen.

      1. Isaac Bartram   10 months ago

        Interesting point.

  10. Jerry B.   10 months ago

    Social media is just such a convenient whipping boy, since it’s amorphous enough that any side can find something wrong with it.

  11. Stevecsd   10 months ago

    There is no freedom in England anymore. A couple of years ago a woman who was across the street from an abortion clinic and was SILENTLY PRAYING was arrested. That is the absurd lengths that government will go to to squelch any deviance from their allowed approved behavior.

    1. Vernon Depner   10 months ago

      Soon they will have the technology to listen in on silent prayers.

      1. JohnZ   10 months ago

        They want to listen in to your thoughts.

  12. See.More   10 months ago

    ... well-intentioned policies to improve online safety...

    Arguing facts not in evidence. The intent is to control/extinguish dissenting information and conversation. There is nothing "well-intentioned" about it.

    1. CE   10 months ago

      Exactly. No one gets hurt online. They are worried about threats to real security, as in the politicians' job security.

  13. CE   10 months ago

    When politicians make certain topics off limits and call it "disinformation," they also conveniently block criticism of their stupid ideas.

  14. NoVaNick   10 months ago

    The UK and US governments just want to shut down all private social media and replace it with something they control, like China does. Pick any crisis (drugs, climate change, racism) and that’s all they need to decide it is too dangerous for individuals to express their own opinions.

  15. DenverJ   10 months ago

    "Without a First Amendment, U.K. citizens lack a reliable body of law to prevent the government from using legal action to force private media businesses to censor on its behalf." And "While the First Amendment protects free speech in America..."
    Soooo, we're just going to ignore the SCOTUS decision to deny standing in Murthy v Missouri?

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   10 months ago

      Reason is in denial.

  16. Gaear Grimsrud   10 months ago

    Well this is a pretty weak effort but better than nothing I guess. But imagine a world without social media managed by private companies. I can. I spent most of my life in that world. Somehow people were victims of tyranny, became revolutionaries, protested wars and conscription, enthusiastically volunteered to be cannon fodder, became Protestants, assassinated monarchs, built pyramids, survived Covid and thousands of other things. Whether it was barely readable tract or a hand written document nailed to a cathedral door or word of mouth somehow shit got done. For better or worse. The problem is not that the Labour regime is censoring social media. The problem is that the regime is an authoritarian dictatorship.

    1. A Thinking Mind   10 months ago

      The problem isn't that they're shutting down twitter, or x, or all social media. The problem is they're co-opting social media to carry only their narratives. So people will be conditioned into using social media to get information, but the information will be censored and curated. It's not going to be a world where people stop using social media, we're not un-ringing that bell. It's just going to be a world where the government tries to make sure only government-approved thoughts are allowed to be expressed.

      1. sarcasmic   10 months ago

        How does it affect people who don't use Twatter or Facederp?

  17. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   10 months ago

    UK is escalating.

    End Wokeness
    @EndWokeness
    Met Police Commissioner Mark Rowley threatens to EXTRADITE and imprison American citizens over online posts.

    He does not rule out Elon Musk.
    VIDEO

    https://x.com/EndWokeness/status/1821934374675206485

    So I will start. Fuck the UK. Fuck the UK police. Fuck the Labour PM. Fuck two tier Keir. Fuck immigrants and their demands for welfare. Fuck liberals protecting them from the crimes they commit.

    1. sarcasmic   10 months ago

      Fuck immigrants

      An accidental bit of honesty that didn’t use the word “illegal” and revealed that the true hatred is for all immigrants. Whoops! You let the mask slip. This is the only honest thing I've ever seen you say.

      1. JesseAz (5-30 Banana Republic Day)   10 months ago

        Sarc, I know you ignore all facts and evidence and diefy illegal immigrants, but can’t help you here.

        I’ve always said I support the 1.5M legal immigrants a year but believe they shouldn’t qualify for welfare and welfare shouldn’t exist.

        But glad to see thats your only care about. Praising leftists while ignoring authoritarian threats of citizens. Glad you continue to demonstrate your leftist care abouts day after day lol.

        My wife is first generation. Have you ever even met an immigrant?

        You are probably salivating at being able to send police after your enemies. Lol.

        So glad to see you stand up for the murder and rape of young kids. You and Jeff are lefties in a pod.

        1. sarcasmic   10 months ago

          If immigrants were denied social programs, would you be cool with letting in anyone who wants to work (who isn’t diseased or wanted)? A streamlined process would incentivize using it instead of sneaking in.

          I guess that's what you call open borders? I don't see that as open. I would refuse people who are sick and/or known to be dangerous. But is that what you mean by open? No defined number of people to be allowed in?

          And there’s no need to lie about family to claim some moral high ground. Pretending to be Vance or something?

    2. JohnZ   10 months ago

      You left out Mark Rowley therefore....fuck Mark Rowley. Fuck that smarmy little c***sucker.
      Now let's see that POS try and extradite me.
      P/S WE are ARMED.

  18. EdG   10 months ago

    It’s interesting that the writer of this article believes George Floyd rioters were just expressing their 1st Amendment protected opinions.

    1. JohnZ   10 months ago

      Tampon Tim obviously thought so. He let them burn Minneapolis and Milwaukee.

      1. EdG   10 months ago

        Tampon Tim laughed his ass off at the Poise Maxipad Trump had covering his ear at the Republican kaffe klatch. I hear Kimberly-Clark offered to hire Trump as an ear model for their Poise Maxipad menstrual pads. He should take the job. He needs it to pay a mechanic to fix his broken airplane marooned in Billings and to buy fuel for it. Maxipad Don doesn't have any money and can't afford to bail out his plane! Hilarious!!

        1. Zipcreature   10 months ago

          ….
          ……..
          …..*squints*…..Damn, the Left truly cannot meme.
          Poise Maxipads? Does talking about pads make Lefty boys giggly?
          Very weird.

    2. Medulla Oblongata   10 months ago

      And hence the two-tiered rioting and policing schools of thought.

      https://www.spiked-online.com/2024/08/03/after-southport-the-rage-against-the-throng/

      It seems that in the eyes of the new elite, some riots are okay, maybe even good, while others are vile acts of fascist lunacy. Angry African-Americans and their white ‘allies’ among the Ivy League left getting violent over the killing of a black man? Good. We bow down. Immigrant communities in Leeds setting fires in response to social workers coming for Roma kids? Fine. The language of the unheard. White working-class men kicking off in the aftermath of the murder of three girls? Evil. Unconscionable. Crush them.

      1. EdG   10 months ago

        Racist much? Yeah, self-evidently. By the way, what percentage of the 15 million George Floyd protesters were violent or committed crimes? And what percentage of your fellow Klansmen in Leeds?

  19. creech   10 months ago

    Widespread riots in Britain? I've seen nothing in the traditional broadcast media about this. Seems everything is about trashsports in Paris, tongue bathing Harris/Walz ticket, and awful flooding in Southeastern states. And Maybe the rioters could take a page from MLK et al and engage in huge peaceful protests?

    1. EdG   10 months ago

      I'm sure that made sense when it was rattling around the vast empty space in your cranium, but once it hit your keyboard, it turned into Trumpist mush.

  20. Pyrrho   10 months ago

    Judging from the photo at the beginning of this article, whatever the inadequacies of the British system in protecting free speech, they have a much higher standard of literacy in protest signs than the U.S.

  21. JohnZ   10 months ago

    Freedom in the west is under attack. Western Europe more closely resembles that which existed hundreds of years ago under despotic near literate dunces who called themselves kings, queens, princes ….the Royal families.
    Now they are under despotic politicians who ultimately take orders from even more despotic technocrats and wealthy elites, many of whom would like to exterminate the lot of us.
    Britain is no different. The little runt, Curr Stammer and his equally little runt mark Rowley, when they are not busily buggering each other, act is if they are just any other little despot.

    Everywhere I hear the sound of marchin’ chargin’ feet boy
    ‘Cause summer’s here and the time is right for
    Fighting in the street boy
    Hey, said my name is called disturbance
    I’ll shout and scream and kill the king
    and rail at all his servants
    Well now what can a poor boy do
    ‘Cept to sing for a rock-n-roll band
    Cause in a sleepy London Town
    There’s just no place for… a street fightin’ man

  22. Medulla Oblongata   10 months ago

    https://www.thepublica.com/germany-woman-convicted-of-offending-migrant-gang-rapists-receives-longer-prison-sentence-than-the-rapists/

    GERMANY: Woman Convicted Of “Offending” Migrant Gang Rapists Receives Longer Prison Sentence Than The Rapists

    A total of 11 men were initially charged, but two were acquitted quickly due to a lack of DNA evidence. The sperm of nine of the men, however, had been successfully recovered from the girl’s body.

    Five of the men were in possession of German passports, while the remainder were not citizens of Germany. Among those charged, none were of German heritage. The rapists were identified as a Pole, an Egyptian, a Libyan, a Kuwaiti, an Iranian, an Armenian, an Afghan, a Syrian, and a Montenegrin. The men had a team of 20 defense attorneys arguing their innocence.

    However, despite DNA and WhatsApp evidence, eight of the nine men convicted walked free with probation and spent no time in prison at all. The ninth was sentenced to two years and nine months in prison without parole.

    The case caused outrage in Germany, both for the brutality of the rape itself and the lenient sentences given to the rapists. As a result, one of the men had his identity and phone number circulated on Snapchat by furious sleuths.

    Angered by the news of the case, a 20-year-old woman from Hamburg messaged the number through WhatsApp. The unnamed woman called him a “dishonorable rapist pig” and a “disgusting miscarriage.” She added: “Aren’t you ashamed when you look in the mirror?”

    The targeted rapist then reported the woman to police, and she was charged with sending him insulting messages.

    The woman has now been convicted and sentenced to a weekend in prison for her remarks — meaning that she will have spent more time in jail than 8 of the 9 rapists. In court, the woman apologized for her remarks, saying she acted out of a “reflex” upon hearing the sickening details of the case.

    But, according to the Hamburger Abendblatt, this woman is not the only person who could be facing a conviction for insulting the rapists.

    Authorities in Hamburg are reportedly investigating 140 people for offenses related to issuing “insult, threats, or other detriment” towards the Stadtpark predators.

  23. One-Punch_Man   10 months ago

    Just remember if you don't agree - you are far right.

  24. middlefinger   10 months ago

    More on good intentioned fascism.

    No search engines will get you to the Walz authoritarian fascism comments…
    https://youtu.be/J4GgsD7JQyg

    Jimmy Dore website scroll down to Walz “No right to free speech”

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