Governments need to engage with figures such as Elon Musk but also require social media firms to be regulated, say experts. AFP
Governments need to engage with figures such as Elon Musk but also require social media firms to be regulated, say experts. AFP
Governments need to engage with figures such as Elon Musk but also require social media firms to be regulated, say experts. AFP
Governments need to engage with figures such as Elon Musk but also require social media firms to be regulated, say experts. AFP

Play nicely or get tough? Officials play catch-up to rein in social media giants


Thomas Harding
  • English
  • Arabic

Britain’s science minister conceded that giants of social media exercise powers equivalent to a sovereign nation state this week as he warned on significantly altered dynamics of dealing with the globe's biggest businesses.

Peter Kyle is accepting the new realities, pivoting to humility and statecraft rather than the threat of legislation. In his intervention on the billionaires with companies able to manipulate algorithms and harvest personal data, he said this tremendous power and influence contrasted with the accountability pressures on elected governments.

“I’m very acutely aware that I can’t sit here in my office in Whitehall and instruct that world to do what I want it to do as secretaries of state have been able to do in the past,” Mr Kyle was quoted in The Times, referring to companies such as Google, Microsoft and Meta.

“I’m probably the first secretary of state that is dealing with companies which are outspending our entire British state when it comes to investment in innovation. So let’s just act with a bit of sense of humility. We are having to apply a sense of statecraft to working with companies that we’ve in the past reserved for dealing with other states.”

Peter Mandelson, the former Labour cabinet minister widely tipped as a future ambassador to Washington, said on Friday that Elon Musk was too big to ignore after he backed Donald Trump's election bid. “He can’t be ignored," he told the News Agents podcast. "We can’t be indifferent to what he’s saying and doing. So, if we can reconnect, we should."

So what can Britain and its peers do about curbing the negative impact of social media operations on individual's lives, while allowing freedom of speech?

Britain is playing catch-up on taming the social media giants, either through improving relations or stricter regulation. How it does so will prove a stiff examination for Keir Starmer’s government.

Clearly confronting mega-rich all-powerful owners, as the new Labour government did with Mr Musk over the summer, does not help. Italy may be about to discover you cannot just insult the tech kings and get away with it after President Sergio Mattarella decided to reprimand Mr Musk for giving an opinion on the country’s migration policy by stating that the billionaire “cannot make it his business to give lessons”.

The law orders social media companies to protect children from seeing violence, pornography and self-harm content. AFP
The law orders social media companies to protect children from seeing violence, pornography and self-harm content. AFP

Australia first

Australia was the first country to take on a social media giant when it attempted to ban Facebook in 2021 in a strategy to make the company pay for news.

Facebook retaliated by blocking all access in Australia, although it belatedly realised this affected important government pages for health and emergency services, not just private companies' news content.

Both sides hastily backed down, but it was a foretaste of a conflict that still appears in the skirmishing stages.

Undaunted, the Australians are having another go, this time by imposing a social media ban for under-16s, with the onus on social media platforms and device manufacturers to implement it.

“The power of multinational social media platforms is a significant challenge for all governments, because their size and reach is such that it's not clear who would prevail in the instance, say, of a country the size of Britain imposing conditions,” Lord Walney, official adviser on political violence, told The National.

He referenced Australia’s Facebook tussle where it was “unclear what might have unfolded” if both sides had gone to war. But what it did reveal was that it was uncertain a government could “mandate changes and expect a company to comply rather than withdraw their services”.

Science, Innovation and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle leaves 10 Downing Street. PA
Science, Innovation and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle leaves 10 Downing Street. PA

Doom scrollers

The egregious side of social media – notably children addicted to their screens, doom-scrolling for hours on end – is something governments know must be addressed.

A test of Britain’s resolve will come when the Online Safety Act, introduced by the Conservatives last year, comes into force early in 2025 with social media companies facing sanctions if they fail to keep children free from harm on their platforms.

However, it will be down to the power of the Ofcom, the communications watchdog, to enforce the rules. These will require the firms and not parents or children, to ensure their online safety. The law orders social media companies to protect children from seeing violence, pornography and self-harm content.

The new UK government has so far left it to a Labour MP, Josh MacAlister, to push through a private members’ bill to exclude under-16s from the platforms where algorithms are designed to make content addictive.

“I do want the government to push harder,” Mr MacAlister said. He proposes a measure to make social media less addictive for under-16s, to decrease the 21 hours a week 12-year-olds spend on their smartphones to improve “mental health, their sleep and their learning”.

The Labour MP diplomatically suggested social media companies gave themselves “first-mover” advantage, by imposing some self-regulation. “If companies can get ahead of this and act responsibly, there will be rewards from consumers, and we can then harness and make the most of technology here in the UK,” he told the BBC.

Children addicted to their screens is something governments know must be addressed. PA
Children addicted to their screens is something governments know must be addressed. PA

Red lines

Politicians agree that more regulation is needed, yet the “how” is tricky, especially given Australia’s experience.

“Governments do have authority, but they are weighing that against the real threat of a company simply withdrawing and the significant impact of that,” said Lord Walney. “This is a genuine dilemma for every western liberal government that prizes innovation and freedom of speech, alongside the very real safety implications that social media is constantly opening up.”

He admitted that governments had been “very slow to adopt a policy that is balanced”. While some had banned TikTok and Facebook, Britain wanted to weigh up “the real importance of freedom of speech” with the need for accountability.

“I don't think any government can simply just say, ‘Oh, well, we're not big enough or important enough, therefore anything goes’. You must amend your regulatory framework with red lines from which you will not cross.”

Facebook's logo on a smartphone screen. AFP
Facebook's logo on a smartphone screen. AFP

Divisive ecosystem

The problem, argued independent MP Shockat Adam, is that the massive and somewhat “divisive” ecosystem of social media is “progressing at a rate much faster than we can regulate it”.

The Muslim MP, whose Leicester constituency was among those targeted in the summer’s anti-immigration riots, suggested that “influencers” should adhere to strict guidelines.

“In particular incitement of hatred and religiously motivated hatred should be a much lower threshold than it is, because we saw the consequences of that in the summer, where people could just say what they wanted.”

Greetings, Mr Musk

In the case of Musk, his company X, formerly Twitter, not only played an influential role in Mr Trump’s US election victory, but he will even have a role within the president-elect's inner sanctum. All while keeping his hands on the tiller at X.

Following his impulses should be no challenge for London. Mr Musk freely states what he wants on social media, something that deeply irritated the British government when at the height of the summer riots the X owner issued a series of inflammatory posts.

Keir Starmer’s government took a different view to that of his predecessor Rishi Sunak, who had staged an adulatory interview with Mr Musk at an AI summit last year, by not inviting him to a major investment event last month.

Elon Musk speaks at a Donald Trump election rally. Reuters
Elon Musk speaks at a Donald Trump election rally. Reuters

Given that a few weeks later Mr Musk is now arguably the world’s most powerful private citizen after heavily backing Mr Trump, some humiliating back-tracking is required.

“We can’t ignore Musk and my answer to most things [is] we have to talk to people and have an open forum,” said Mr Adam. “Invite Musk over, invite all the Zuckerbergs and the rest, as we have to start talking.”

Not everyone agrees that this approach would work. The government should perform its “duty as the representative of the public to protect them against the whims of messianic billionaires”, said Hamid Ekbia, director of the Autonomous Systems Policy Institute.

“Lack of regulation is a kind of economic order that gives big corporations a free hand in pushing their agendas forward. In such an environment, their agendas essentially become regulations.”

The rise of social media giants is a challenge that, unless there’s some adroit statecraft, could well evolve from skirmish to confrontation.

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Red flags
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Conflict, drought, famine

Estimates of the number of deaths caused by the famine range from 400,000 to 1 million, according to a document prepared for the UK House of Lords in 2024.
It has been claimed that the policies of the Ethiopian government, which took control after deposing Emperor Haile Selassie in a military-led revolution in 1974, contributed to the scale of the famine.
Dr Miriam Bradley, senior lecturer in humanitarian studies at the University of Manchester, has argued that, by the early 1980s, “several government policies combined to cause, rather than prevent, a famine which lasted from 1983 to 1985. Mengistu’s government imposed Stalinist-model agricultural policies involving forced collectivisation and villagisation [relocation of communities into planned villages].
The West became aware of the catastrophe through a series of BBC News reports by journalist Michael Buerk in October 1984 describing a “biblical famine” and containing graphic images of thousands of people, including children, facing starvation.

Band Aid

Bob Geldof, singer with the Irish rock group The Boomtown Rats, formed Band Aid in response to the horrific images shown in the news broadcasts.
With Midge Ure of the band Ultravox, he wrote the hit charity single Do They Know it’s Christmas in December 1984, featuring a string of high-profile musicians.
Following the single’s success, the idea to stage a rock concert evolved.
Live Aid was a series of simultaneous concerts that took place at Wembley Stadium in London, John F Kennedy Stadium in Philadelphia, the US, and at various other venues across the world.
The combined event was broadcast to an estimated worldwide audience of 1.5 billion.

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Video: 8K@24fps, 4K@60fps, full-HD@60fps, HD@30fps, super slo-mo@960fps

Front camera: 40MP f/2.2

Battery: 5000mAh, fast wireless charging 2.0 Wireless PowerShare

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Colours: burgundy, green, phantom black, phantom white, graphite, sky blue, red

Price: Dh4,699 for 128GB, Dh5,099 for 256GB, Dh5,499 for 512GB; 1TB unavailable in the UAE

If you go

 

  • The nearest international airport to the start of the Chuysky Trakt is in Novosibirsk. Emirates (www.emirates.com) offer codeshare flights with S7 Airlines (www.s7.ru) via Moscow for US$5,300 (Dh19,467) return including taxes. Cheaper flights are available on Flydubai and Air Astana or Aeroflot combination, flying via Astana in Kazakhstan or Moscow. Economy class tickets are available for US$650 (Dh2,400).
  • The Double Tree by Hilton in Novosibirsk ( 7 383 2230100,) has double rooms from US$60 (Dh220). You can rent cabins at camp grounds or rooms in guesthouses in the towns for around US$25 (Dh90).
  • The transport Minibuses run along the Chuysky Trakt but if you want to stop for sightseeing, hire a taxi from Gorno-Altaisk for about US$100 (Dh360) a day. Take a Russian phrasebook or download a translation app. Tour companies such as  Altair-Tour ( 7 383 2125115 ) offer hiking and adventure packages.
How to help

Send “thenational” to the following numbers or call the hotline on: 0502955999
2289 – Dh10
2252 – Dh 50
6025 – Dh20
6027 – Dh 100
6026 – Dh 200

Overview

What: The Arab Women’s Sports Tournament is a biennial multisport event exclusively for Arab women athletes.

When: From Sunday, February 2, to Wednesday, February 12.

Where: At 13 different centres across Sharjah.

Disciplines: Athletics, archery, basketball, fencing, Karate, table tennis, shooting (rifle and pistol), show jumping and volleyball.

Participating countries: Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, Qatar and UAE.

Indika
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Updated: November 15, 2024, 6:26 PM`