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Meta found in breach of EU law over ‘ineffective’ complaints system for flagging illegal content

1 day ago
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Instagram and Facebook have breached EU law by failing to provide users with simple ways to complain or flag illegal content, including child sexual abuse material and terrorist content, the European Commission has said.In a preliminary finding on Friday, the EU’s executive body said Meta, the $1.8tn (£1.4tn) California company that runs Instagram and Facebook, had introduced unnecessary steps in processes for users to submit reports.It said both platforms appeared to use deceptive design – known as “dark patterns” – in the reporting mechanism in a way that could be “confusing and dissuading” to users.

The commission found this amounted to a breach of the company’s obligations under the EU-wide Digital Services Act (DSA), and meant that “Meta’s mechanisms to flag and remove illegal content may be ineffective”,Meta denies it has breached the act,“When it comes to Meta, neither Facebook nor Instagram appear to provide a user-friendly and easily accessible ‘notice and action’ mechanism for users to flag illegal content such as child sexual abuse material and terrorist content,” the commission said,A senior EU official said the case was not only about illegal content, but also about freedom of speech and “moderation that has gone too far”,In the past, Facebook has been accused of “shadow banning” users on issues such as Palestine, meaning their content is demoted by the algorithm.

The current mechanisms for complaints were “too difficult for users to go through to the end”, resulting not just in ineffectiveness but a disincentive for users to get in touch, the official said.Campaigners have continued to allege safety shortcomings in some of Meta’s products.Last month, a Meta whistleblower, Arturo Béjar, published research he said showed that the majority of new safety tools rolled out on Instagram were ineffective, leaving children under 13 not safe on the platform.Meta rejected the report’s findings and said parents had robust tools at their fingertips.The company introduced mandatory teen accounts on Instagram in September 2024, and it said this month it would adopt a version of the PG-13 cinema rating system to give parents stronger controls over their teenagers’s use of the social media platform.

The commission also said Meta made things difficult for users whose content had been blocked or their accounts suspended.It found the decision appeal mechanism did not appear to allow users to provide explanations or evidence to substantiate their appeals, limiting its effectiveness.The commission said simplification of the feedback system would also help the platforms eliminate fake news such as the deepfake video in Ireland claiming the leading presidential election candidate, Catherine Connolly, was pulling out of Friday’s election.The investigation, which is ongoing, was carried out in cooperation with Coimisiún na Meán, the Irish digital services coordinator responsible for regulating the platforms, whose EU headquarters are in Dublin.The commission also made a preliminary finding that TikTok and Meta were in breach of their obligation to grant researchers adequate access to public data that could be used to check on how far minors are exposed to illegal or harmful content.

It said researchers were often left with partial or unreliable data.“Allowing researchers access to platforms’ data is an essential transparency obligation under the DSA, as it provides public scrutiny into the potential impact of platforms on our physical and mental health,” the commission said.The preliminary findings allow the platforms time to comply with the commission’s demands.If they do not, they face a fine of up to 6% of total worldwide annual turnover, with periodic penalty payments to compel compliance.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionHenna Virkkunen, the commission’s executive vice-president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy, said: “Our democracies depend on trust.

That means platforms must empower users, respect their rights and open their systems to scrutiny.“The DSA makes this a duty, not a choice.With today’s actions, we have now issued preliminary findings on researchers’ access to data to four platforms.We are making sure platforms are accountable for their services, as ensured by EU law, towards users and society.”A Meta spokesperson said: “We disagree with any suggestion that we have breached the DSA, and we continue to negotiate with the European Commission on these matters.

In the European Union, we have introduced changes to our content reporting options, appeals process, and data access tools since the DSA came into force and are confident that these solutions match what is required under the law in the EU.”TikTok said it was not possible to fully share data about its platform with researchers without breaking separate GDPR data protection rules.“TikTok is committed to transparency and values the contribution of researchers to our platform and the wider industry,” a spokesperson said.“We have made substantial investments in data sharing and almost 1,000 research teams have been given access to data through our research tools to date.“We are reviewing the European Commission’s findings, but requirements to ease data safeguards place the DSA and GDPR in direct tension.

”The company urged regulators to “provide clarity on how these obligations should be reconciled”.
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Meta found in breach of EU law over ‘ineffective’ complaints system for flagging illegal content

Instagram and Facebook have breached EU law by failing to provide users with simple ways to complain or flag illegal content, including child sexual abuse material and terrorist content, the European Commission has said.In a preliminary finding on Friday, the EU’s executive body said Meta, the $1.8tn (£1.4tn) California company that runs Instagram and Facebook, had introduced unnecessary steps in processes for users to submit reports.It said both platforms appeared to use deceptive design – known as “dark patterns” – in the reporting mechanism in a way that could be “confusing and dissuading” to users

1 day ago
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Amazon reveals cause of AWS outage that took everything from banks to smart beds offline

Amazon has revealed the cause of this week’s hours-long AWS outage, which took everything from Signal to smart beds offline, was a bug in automation software that had widespread consequences.In a lengthy outline of the cause of the outage published on Thursday, AWS revealed a cascading set of events brought down thousands of sites and applications that host their services with the company.AWS said customers were unable to connect to DynamoDB, its database system where AWS customers store their data, due to “a latent defect within the service’s automated DNS [domain name system] management system”.DynamoDB maintains hundreds of thousands of DNS records. It uses automation to monitor the system to ensure records are updated frequently to ensure additional capacity is added as required, hardware failures are handled and traffic is distributed efficiently

2 days ago
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Trump pardons founder of Binance, world’s largest crypto exchange

Donald Trump issued a pardon for the founder of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange on Thursday.“President Trump exercised his constitutional authority by issuing a pardon for Mr Zhao, who was prosecuted by the Biden administration in their war on cryptocurrency,” a White House statement said. “The war on crypto is over.”Changpeng Zhao pleaded guilty in late 2023 to one count of failing to maintain an anti-money laundering program and stepped down as CEO of Binance, which paid $4.3bn to settle related allegations

2 days ago
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‘Attacks will get through’: head of GCHQ urges companies to do more to fight cybercrime

Companies need to do more to mitigate the potential effects of cyber-attacks, the head of GCHQ has said, including making physical, paper copies of crisis plans to use if an attack brings down entire computer systems.“What are your contingency plans? Because attacks will get through,” said Anne Keast-Butler, who has headed GCHQ, the British government’s cyber and signals intelligence agency, since 2023.“What happens when that happens to you in a company, have you really tested that?” said Keast-Butler, speaking on Wednesday at a London conference organised by the cybersecurity company Recorded Future. “Your plans … have you got them on paper somewhere in case all your systems really go down? How will you communicate with each other if you’re completely reliant on a system that actually you shut down?”Last week, the National Cyber Security Centre, which is part of GCHQ, announced figures showing that “highly significant” cyber-attacks have risen by 50% in the past year. Security and intelligence agencies are now dealing with a new attack several times per week, the figures showed

2 days ago
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Nothing Ear 3 review: good-looking earbuds with ‘Super Mic’ party trick

Nothing’s latest semi-transparent noise-cancelling earbuds have a new trick up their sleeves: a high-quality mic in the case that you can push a button to talk into.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.This so-called Super Mic is designed for all those who want a microphone-in-the-hand experience for clearer conversations, recordings and voice notes in noisy environments

3 days ago
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Tesla reports steep drop in profits despite US rush to buy electric vehicles

Despite record vehicle sales, Tesla saw a precipitous drop in profit in its most recent quarter.A rush to buy electric vehicles before a US tax credit for them disappears had boosted Tesla’s flagging sales, leading to the automaker exceeding some of Wall Street’s projections in its most recent financial quarter. Yet the company failed to meet earnings expectations and its stock fell in after-hours trading.Tesla reported third-quarter earnings of $0.50 a share on Wednesday after market close, less than the $0

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