Germany Considers Fining Facebook $522,000 Per Fake News Item
Germany Considers Fining Facebook $522,000 Per Fake News
Item
By Lukas Mikelionis | 2:49 pm, December 27, 2016
The government of Germany is considering imposing a legal
regime that would allow fining social networks such as Facebook up to 500,000
euros ($522,000) for each day the platform leaves a “fake news” story up
without deleting it.
In the name of combating harms from false news, the
German government next year will consider the bill, which has bipartisan
support, that will allow both official and private complainants to flag content
that is considered “fake news”.
The law would also force the social networks to create
in-country offices focused on responding to takedown demands and would make
these networks responsible for compensation if a post by individual users were
found to slander someone.
“If after the relevant checks Facebook does not
immediately, within 24 hours, delete the offending post then [it] must reckon
with severe penalties of up to 500,000 euros,” said Germany’s parliamentary
chief of the Social Democrat party, Thomas Oppermann in an interview with
Germany’s Der Spiegel magazine.
German lawmakers believe this bill will help tackle the
possibility of Russia meddling in Parliamentary elections scheduled for next
year. This follows the allegations that the Kremlin was behind the hacking of
the Democratic National Committee that led to the leak of thousands of emails
by key aides to Hillary Clinton.
The German intelligence agency has warned that Russia
could try to undermine the elections next year by employing automated bots on
social media to spread fake news articles.
Some members of the government have advocated
criminalizing the spread of so-called “fake news”. Patrick Sensburg, a senior
MP in Merkel’s party said recently: “Targeting disinformation to destabilize a
state should be a criminal offence.”
Hans-Georg Maassen, the head of Germany’s domestic
intelligence agency, told Bild am Sonntag: “Facebook is earning an awful lot of
money with fake news.” He added: “A company that earns billions from the
internet also has a social responsibility.”
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