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Culture secretary: we want to turn the tide against online Jew-hate

'If social media companies fail to protect their users from harmful content, including antisemitism, they will face steep fines'

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December 17, 2020 10:23

This week was an important one in the fight against vile online antisemitism.

Anti-Jewish discrimination has existed for millennia, but as countless readers of this paper will unfortunately know, that age-old bile has found a new lease of life on the internet.

Jewish people routinely find themselves subjected to hateful posts and poisonous conspiracy theories on Twitter, Facebook and beyond. Labour MP Margaret Hodge says she was bombarded with 90,000 abusive tweets in just two months. And as we saw with the Wiley incident earlier this year, too often, online platforms take too long to remove that hateful content or ban abusive trolls from their sites.

Now, though, they will be forced to act.

This week, the government became one of the first in the world to announce a comprehensive regime for online safety - binding social media companies to a new legal duty of care. If they fail to protect their users from harmful content, including antisemitism, companies will face steep fines of up to £18 million, or 10 percent of annual global turnover - whichever is highest.

Combatting antisemitism is a priority in our legislation. Platforms will have to react swiftly to antisemitic hate crimes, and remove illegal content without delay. They will also have to enforce their own stated bans on anti-semitic content that might not reach the level of criminality both transparently and effectively. The biggest companies will be required to publish annual transparency reports to track their progress. If they are found to be dragging their feet, they will face the legal consequences.

At the same time we are working to make sure the law is fit to tackle digital crimes. A recent review by my department and the Law Commission found that it needed updating to cover online abuse, including coordinated harassment by groups of people - aka “pile-ons”. The Law Commission is set to provide its final recommendations for action early in the New Year, and we will carefully consider whether we should use our forthcoming Online Harms legislation to bring those recommendations into law.

As MP for Hertsmere, I’m proud to represent one of the largest Jewish communities in the country. Under our proposals, they and every other person in the UK will be safer when they log on.

Oliver Dowden MP is Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport

December 17, 2020 10:23

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