More than a dozen of the world's biggest tech companies face unprecedented legal scrutiny, as the European Union's sweeping Digital Services Act (DSA) imposes new rules on content moderation, user privacy and transparency.
Lots of regulation around misinformation and hate speech and what not, but no talk about actually regulating what people and companies can post and advertise on social media? Why not go after the source as well?
As far as I know AI moderation at that scale and accuracy isn’t possible at the moment, and I’m glad that they’re lighting a fire under these companies asses to figure it out, but I’m not convinced a single prong approach is the way to go to actually solve the problem.
Correct me if I’m missing something though, this sort of regulation isn’t my area of expertise.
Lots of regulation around misinformation and hate speech and what not, but no talk about actually regulating what people and companies can post and advertise on social media? Why not go after the source as well?
As far as I know AI moderation at that scale and accuracy isn’t possible at the moment, and I’m glad that they’re lighting a fire under these companies asses to figure it out, but I’m not convinced a single prong approach is the way to go to actually solve the problem.
Correct me if I’m missing something though, this sort of regulation isn’t my area of expertise.
Can’t tell either. Seems to be one piece of a broader policy, along with GRDP and another one coming up, which name I forgot
GRDP doesn’t seem to work very well. I asked Reddit for my data on July the 1st. I still received nothing.