Online safety bill returns to parliament after five-month delay
- The online safety bill, the government’s flagship internet regulation, returns to parliament today.
- Throughout the process it has changed substantially, from its original focus on online harms such as abuse and harassment, through a switch to child protection concerns around suicide and self-harm in the wake of Molly Russell.
- The reintroduction of the bill comes with a number of elements designed to soften objections on the grounds of free speech.
- For more on this story, please visit the Guardian’s website.
New study says risky online behaviour ‘almost normalised’ among young people
- According to EU-funded research, risky and criminal online behaviour is in danger of becoming normalised among young people across nine European countries, including the UK.
- A survey of 8,000 young people found one in four aged 16-19 have trolled someone online, one in eight have engaged in online harassment and one in five have engaged in sexting.
- The survey asked young people about 20 types of behaviour online, including looking at pornographic material, posting revenge porn, making self-generated sexual images and posting hate speech.
- The research indicated that just under half of participants engaged in behaviour that could be considered criminal, with co-author of the research Julia Davidson stating “online risk-taking has become almost normalised”.
- For more on this story, please visit the Guardian’s website.
Twitter to rely more on AI than staff to detect hate speech
- The Centre for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) reported that hate speech has reportedly increased since Elon Musk’s takeover.
- Another research group at the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) had earlier found that the use of the N-word increased by nearly 500% in the 12 hours immediately after Musk’s deal to buy Twitter was finalised.
- Research also suggested that slurs against gay men and antisemitic posts rose after Musk bought Twitter.
- Twitter is relying more on artificial intelligence to moderate content instead of banking on staff to conduct manual checks.
- This comes after layoffs of Twitter’s entire workforce with staff numbers dropping from 7,500 to 2,000.
- For more on this story, please visit the Independent’s website.
Youth Centre Cuts: Warning that ‘wider community will suffer’
- Youth leaders have warned that “the wider community will suffer” if planned cuts to youth centres go ahead.
- Some have told BBC News NI that they will have to reduce the number of nights that centres can open for the young people and staff they employ.
- The EA guidance documents on the “assessment of need” in each council area in Northern Ireland indicated that many are set to get less funding in 2022/23.
- The Youth Work Alliance, which represents voluntary youth centres across Northern Ireland has also warned that cuts to funding will have a detrimental impact on the lives of young people.
- For more on this story, please visit the BBC News website.