Clicky

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Support the exposure of censorship and surveillance, and protect your digital rights:

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Support the exposure of censorship and surveillance, and protect your digital rights:

UK Labour Party calls on PM Boris Johnson to censor vaccine-skeptic conversations online

The party wants a new bill that forces Big Tech to delete conversations that criticize the vaccine.

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, join Reclaim The Net.

The Labour Party wants Prime Minister Boris Johnson to introduce an emergency bill to address the spread of vaccine skeptic content on social media. The party argues that if people are allowed to make critical comments about the vaccine online, it could hamper vaccination efforts which have already started in the UK.

The shadow secretary for culture and media Jo Stevens said the government should introduce an emergency bill in the House of Commons that would force social media companies to promptly remove vaccine โ€œmisinformationโ€ within a specified period. She suggested sanctions for the owners of the platforms if the content is not removed within the specified period.

According to Stevens, the emergency bill is needed since the controversial Online Harms Bill, introduced by the government to tackle similar issues, is at the white paper stage โ€“ it might not be passed by parliament until Spring 2021.

โ€œThis is about preventing social media platforms from facilitating the spread of anti-vaxxer information. This is being done at an industrial level scale by groups and bad actors,โ€ Stevens said.

โ€œIf there are repeated and aggravated breaches of that then there should be personal liability on senior executives on those platforms,โ€ Stevens added. โ€œ[The government] could bring a bill forward. It needs to be very simple. Although government has talked about online harms for a long time even if we get their response to the white paper shortly, we know itโ€™s unlikely that legislation will have Royal Assent until after the vaccine rollout has happened.โ€

The founder of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, Imran Ahmed, who has recently shifted from calling for censorship of โ€œhateโ€ online to calling for vaccine-skeptic censorship, shared similar thoughts. He said the Online Harms Bill was necessary, but noted the government needs a faster solution to handle anti-vaccination information online.

โ€œThe failure of social media companies to tackle malignant behavior on their platforms, first with COVID-19 misinformation and now anti-vaccine extremism, demonstrates why the Government must bring forward its Online Harms Bill as soon as possible,โ€ Ahmed said. โ€œHowever, the most urgent problem needs a far more immediate solution. Lies designed to persuade people not to protect themselves and their families are being broadcast to millions of people online every day.โ€

That said, social media companies, such as Facebook and Twitter, have taken steps to reduce the spread of vaccine-skepticism.
Facebook, for example, directs users to โ€œauthoritativeโ€ sources of information explaining the importance of vaccines when they search โ€œanti-vaccine.โ€ Twitter takes users to โ€œknow the facts section,โ€ which contains a link to Covid-19 vaccinations page on the NHS website in the UK.

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, join Reclaim The Net.

Logo with a red shield enclosing a stylized globe and three red arrows pointing upward to the right, next to the text 'RECLAIM THE NET' with 'RECLAIM' in gray and 'THE NET' in red

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Support the exposure of censorship and surveillance, and protect your digital rights:

Logo with a red shield enclosing a stylized globe and three red arrows pointing upward to the right, next to the text 'RECLAIM THE NET' with 'RECLAIM' in gray and 'THE NET' in red

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Support the exposure of censorship and surveillance, and protect your digital rights: