Australia’s lone war against misinformation, hatred and toxicity

Colin Peacock

Colin Peacock

Wellington, October 17, 2021

Will New Zealand join to save the media and societies?

                                                                                              Australia Prime Minister Scott Morrison (SBS TV Screen Grab)

 

Big tech platforms have failed to tackle the misinformation and toxicity they spread and their dominance of the market for digital media revenue is becoming increasingly obvious.

Australia’s government has confronted them on both fronts and the news media have benefited. Can others, including ours, follow their lead?

Fear in Christchurch

Last Monday (October 11, 2021), RNZ’s Conan Young was out and about in Christchurch asking people about the threat of Covid-19. 

One woman who worked for a construction company with about a hundred employees told him that the unvaccinated were a problem for business like hers and blamed online misinformation.  

“People do not realise the cost to business owners of not getting vaccinated and thinking the be-all and end-all of information is Facebook. Where are you getting your information? Facebook? Instagram? Or a scientist?” she asked.

She declined to state her name or the name of her business, possibly because she was just a private sort of person, but maybe because she feared a backlash via social media from the people she was talking about.

And that is not an unreasonable fear these days. 

In a long reflection on the power of big tech platforms published last week, The Spinoff’s Managing Editor Duncan Greive noted anti-vaxxers were spamming the Facebook stream of a 1 pm press briefing with vaccine falsehoods while the Prime Minister herself was urging people to get the jab ASAP because the number of first doses had begun to fall worryingly.

No moderation at Facebook

Where is the moderation at Facebook  – the intervention that could stop this from happening?

Not here, it seems.   

Most of Facebook’s human moderators are focused on the US.

Duncan Greive asked Facebook where its moderators for New Zealand were, but the only response was a statement from a nameless Facebook company spokesperson: “Our content moderation approach is global, operates 24/7 across multiple time zones, and in many different languages.” 

Greive concluded that Facebook and the search-titan Google, two of the biggest and most profitable companies the world has ever known, operate here “with less regulation than the average local takeaway or taxi firm.”

His article, just like the worries of that anonymous construction company woman in Christchurch,  would not have bothered those at Facebook’s top table. 

But they were worried when Frances Hougan, a former employee from Facebook’s own anti-misinformation team, testified in the US Congress recently and went public on 60 Minutes. 

An earlier set of leaked internal documents published by the Wall Street Journal: The Facebook Files also showed that the social network knew all about many of the ill effects it creates.

Mark Zuckerberg countered by claiming that Facebook spends more on research and safety than even bigger companies like Apple, Microsoft and Google. 

But for all of them, the pressure to act meaningfully on misinformation is growing.

Google Summit on Fighting Misinformation

Last week Google held a virtual summit called Fighting Misinformation in the Asia Pacific – and Mediawatch was invited. 

It was a closed meeting and hence the participants cannot be quoted verbatim, but Google officers reiterated the Company’s core mission – to index the world information for us all, regardless of political viewpoints – and insisted the vast bulk of it is harmless. 

But Google also owns the world’s biggest video sharing platform YouTube. That houses millions of hours of fact-free comment and claims that are algorithmically boosted to millions of fresh eyeballs, along with the often toxic text comments that accompany them. 

Participants were told that 20,000 people worked on misinformation detection – and over the years Google had invested $1 billion in moderation. 

Google staffers also pointed to partnerships with respected news organisations like the Associated Press and official outfits like Election Commission of India. 

They also said that efforts to counter manipulation and SEO were improving too and that Google often goes the extra mile to prevent harm. 

One example given was action against the growing number of bogus or poor quality rehab centres in the US targeting vulnerable people searching Google for addiction treatment options. 

Google severely restricted the number of rehab-related search ads in late 2017 and rehab facilities saw a 96% decline in the reach of ads afterwards. 

Google resumed ads for certified rehab facilities last February but only for businesses which completed a certification programme that cost each one around US $3000.  

But while this intervention had a good effect, it also illustrates Google’s overwhelming dominance in those online  ads- and the responsibility that comes with great power.

Australia takes action  

In Australia, the government has confronted that dominance and the conduct and content of Facebook and other online platforms. 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison told reporters that the government was focused on “holding big social media companies to account” for the actions of users. 

Social media had become a “coward’s palace” where people could anonymously “destroy people’s lives.”

“They are not a platform anymore. They are a publisher,” he said.

Australia is also the first country to use competition laws to force Facebook and Google to pay for the news media’s content.  

Back in February, Facebook packed a sad over that and pulled news off the feeds of Aussie users but only for a short time. Google, by contrast, started doing confidential deals with news publishers to pay for carrying their content. 

News Media Bargaining Code

Major and medium-sized media companies are using the income from the News Media Bargaining Code to expand and to hire more journalists.

Journalism expert Professor Andrea Carson from Melbourne’s La Trobe University published a major report on misinformation in this part of the world earlier this year (funded by Facebook itself). She also took part in Google’s summit on misinformation. 

Professor Carson has published a new analysis of that ground-breaking deal stuck with Australian news media – The Grand Bargain – in which she says that big tech’s hold over the media industry may be set to change. 

“It is clearly a problem for democracies globally how you manage this unregulated space that enables digital platforms unprecedented market share of advertising – and to be a conduit for misinformation and disinformation. But I think that the answer in Australia really lies with the fact that we have Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp as a dominant media player,” Professor Carson told Mediawatch. 

 

Andrea Carson, Associate Professor La Trobe University, Melbourne (Photo Supplied)

“Murdoch and his publications have been putting pressure on the government for some time to address the growing market share of the big technology companies. This led to the government ordering an ACCC (Australia’s Commerce Commission) inquiry.

“In 2017, they reported back recommendations including Australia establishing a news media bargaining code to get the companies to pay for third-party news content on the websites. The other component was a code of practice for the platforms on how to manage misinformation and this information,” Professor Carson said.

Facebook is as popular and profitable as ever even after previous scandals such as Cambridge Analytica. Will the current revelations and the Facebook Files make a mark? 

“I think that it has a cumulative effect and what is particularly important about these allegations is that it is young people at the heart of them. That is why we have seen a greater call to action,” she said.

Fighting Fake News

Professor Carson’s report Fighting Fake News has a stark conclusion: 

“The global spread of online misinformation has the potential to erode foundational elements of modern civilisation. Misinformation surrounding reporting on Covid-19 has exposed the broader potential of information disorder on the internet to jeopardise public health and safety.”

But Google’s representatives did not seem under pressure during last week’s Regional Misinformation Summit. 

“It is great to see the companies engaging with the problem. But I think that there is always more that can be done because this is a global problem that is not going away. It is not a problem that can be solved on just one platform,” Professor Carson said.

Many of Australia’s digital platforms have signed up to a voluntary code of practice that covers search engines and platforms that accommodate user-generated content but excludes private messaging services, email services and excludes WhatsApp, Weibo and other popular messaging platforms.

Some governments in this region have gone further than Australia to hold them to account. 

“Singapore and Indonesia have legislated against fake news, but the government gets to determine what is fake news and how they respond to it. When you give government so much power, the targets of those laws have largely been journalists and political opposition,’ Professor Carson said.  

But now that we have a crisis of Covid proportions, does it come in handy to have a blunt instrument like that?

“Some of the policymakers would say so and (the Singaporean Law) has captured some claims about harmful treatments and efficacy of vaccines. But there were already laws in place that could have dealt with that without the heavy-handed approach of anti-fake news laws. Singapore is currently debating a law that could go even further,” Professor Carson told Mediawatch. 

The Guardian-SBS deals

The Australian arm of The Guardian and state-owned broadcaster SBS have recently hired journalists and launched projects using income from Google and Facebook secured by their News Media Bargaining Code deals.

“This is a new development. So far, there have been 14 deals done between media companies and Google and 11 with Facebook. The problem with the code is picking in choosing who gets to do a deal with a big tech companies. You have to have an income of $150,000 for three out of five previous years so small companies and start-ups are excluded. The Conversation (a university-funded public interest journalism service) has been excluded by Facebook – and they are unhappy about that but Google has done a deal with them,” she said. 

Professor Carson said that News Corp has been slashing jobs and that they have been enormous beneficiaries of the code.

Media reports that are fairly reliable suggest that they have made around AU$30 million out of the deal but that is not necessarily translating into public interest journalism. So we need to watch this code really closely to see who gets to do the deals and whether it translates into public interest journalism,” Professor Carson said.

The government has addressed the deficit in public interest journalism with a $55 million fund of public money. Critics complain that it creates an unhealthy dependence upon government largesse.    

Could New Zealand and other countries follow Australia’s example and help media outlets extract revenue from online platforms with similar law changes? 

“I hope there is a contagion effect and big tech does take responsibility and support quality journalism in other countries. There’s been interest also from the UK, Canada and even the US in adopting something similar,” she said. 

Colin Peacock is ‘Mediawatch’ Presenter at Radio New Zealand. The above article has been published under a Special Agreement with www.rnz.co.nz

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Share this story

Related Stories

Indian Newslink

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide

Advertisement

Previous slide
Next slide