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Google Won't Add Fact Checks Despite New EU Law
vendredi 17 janvier 2025, 08:00 , par Slashdot
Walker said Google's current approach to content moderation works and pointed to successful content moderation during last year's 'unprecedented cycle of global elections' as proof. He said a new feature added to YouTube last year that enables some users to add contextual notes to videos 'has significant potential.' (That program is similar to X's Community Notes feature, as well as new program announced by Meta last week.) The EU's Code of Practice on Disinformation, introduced in 2022, includes several voluntary commitments that tech firms and private companies, including fact-checking organizations, are expected to deliver on. The Code, originally created in 2018, predates the EU's new content moderation law, the Digital Services Act (DSA), which went into effect in 2022. The Commission has held private discussions over the past year with tech companies, urging them to convert the voluntary measures into an official code of conduct under the DSA. Walker said in his letter Thursday that Google had already told the Commission that it didn't plan to comply. Google will 'pull out of all fact-checking commitments in the Code before it becomes a DSA Code of Conduct,' he wrote. He said Google will continue to invest in improvements to its current content moderation practices, which focus on providing people with more information about their search results through features like Synth ID watermarking and AI disclosures on YouTube. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/01/17/0012237/google-wont-add-fact-checks-despite-new-eu-law?utm_...
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ven. 17 janv. - 20:18 CET
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