The EU on Wednesday told digital platform X to explain a cut to content moderation resources, amid concerns over disinformation ahead of European elections in June.
The demand is part of the EU’s probe into US tech billionaire Elon Musk’s X, the former Twitter, that was launched in December under a law clamping down on illegal content online.
The European Union has launched a similar probe into Meta’s Facebook and Instagram amid fears they are also doing too little to tackle disinformation.
Brussels is especially worried about the threat of Russian manipulation of voters before the polls on June 6-9.
The European Commission said it wanted more information about X’s “content moderation activities and resources” after a transparency report in April showed it has cut its team of content moderators by “almost 20 percent” since an October 2023 report.
X had reduced the moderators’ “linguistic coverage within the European Union from 11 EU languages to seven”, it added.
It told X to hand over “detailed information and internal documents”.
The EU also wants more details about risk assessments and actions taken to mitigate the dangers of generative AI on elections.
X must respond to the questions about content moderation and generative AI by May 17, the commission said.
The December investigation was launched under the EU’s mammoth content moderation law known as the Digital Services Act (DSA).
Under the DSA, 23 “very large” platforms including X as well as TikTok and YouTube face greater scrutiny by the commission.
Breaches of the law carry the risk of fines of up to six percent of a company’s global revenues. The EU has the power to ban a platform operating in the 27-country bloc for serious and repeated violations.
© 2024 AFP
EU queries X over cut to content moderation resources (2024, May 8)
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