Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Podjoint Logo
US
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/52/49/94/5249948c-0391-80d7-71a1-c11ad3f8dc7f/mza_2476408126427699344.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Byline Times Audio Articles
Unknown
49 episodes
7 hours ago
The latest articles from Byline Times converted to audio for easy listening
Show more...
Politics
News,
News Commentary
RSS
All content for Byline Times Audio Articles is the property of Unknown and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The latest articles from Byline Times converted to audio for easy listening
Show more...
Politics
News,
News Commentary
https://bylinetimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/3CNP8RE.jpg
'No Faith' in X and Meta to Tackle Abuse in Politics, Says Speaker's Inquiry as It Suggests MPs Leave Platforms
Byline Times Audio Articles
12 minutes 54 seconds
1 week ago
'No Faith' in X and Meta to Tackle Abuse in Politics, Says Speaker's Inquiry as It Suggests MPs Leave Platforms
Support our mission to provide fearless stories about and outside the media system
Packed with exclusive investigations, analysis, and features
SUBSCRIBE TODAY
Politicians should "feel empowered" to leave platforms like X - formerly Twitter - if they believe it presents a greater risk than benefit to their work, according to a damning new report from the House of Commons' speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle.
The report includes the strongest nudge yet for politicians to consider leaving X or Facebook altogether.
The official House of Commons report from the Speaker's Conference on abuse of politicians is damning about X, formerly Twitter, where toxic content appears to have got far worse since far-right billionaire Elon Musk took over in 2022.
While a spokesperson for X told the inquiry: "It is very important that people who use the platform are not victims of abuse" and that they take the issue seriously, the Speaker-led probe found that X was failing in its legal duties to remove threats of violence against politicians.
And the special conference from Speaker Lindsay Hoyle said X's written evidence was "often more evasive than it was informative". For example it noted that "when asked for the percentage of requests for information from the police they had denied due to insufficient evidence to support the request, X declined to say."
ENJOYING THIS ARTICLE? HELP US TO PRODUCE MORE
Receive the monthly Byline Times newspaper and help to support fearless, independent journalism that breaks stories, shapes the agenda and holds power to account.
PAY ANNUALLY - £39.50 A YEAR
PAY MONTHLY - £3.75 A MONTH
MORE OPTIONS
We're not funded by a billionaire oligarch or an offshore hedge-fund. We rely on our readers to fund our journalism. If you like what we do, please subscribe.
But the Commons body did extract important information from the social media platform, long seen as a "public square" for political debate in the UK and beyond.
X has "only 1,486 human reviewers working in English" despite receiving "more than 85,000 posts that breach their terms of service every day" according to the platform's own data.
It also found that X "shared information with the police in less than half of the instances when it was requested formally, and in only 30% of instances when it was requested informally" - compared to Meta's 85% compliance rate.
Both Meta - which owns Facebook and Instagram - and X had a higher bar for removing abuse when it concerned politicians.
The report notes that Meta only removes "violent threats against public figures, such as MPs and candidates if they are found to be 'credible'" - using a "high bar" including looking for "specific locations and timing of a potential attack". Meanwhile, X's enforcement considers whether content "may be a topic of legitimate public interest" - in other words, attacks on politicians are viewed as more acceptable than ordinary members of the public.
The critical assessment from the Speaker's Conference concluded: "We have no faith that Meta and X will resolve these issues unless they are legally obliged to do so. There is therefore no point in us recommending wholesale change of policies or modus operandi."
Don't miss a story
SIGN UP TO EMAIL UPDATES
Key concerns from the report found a general "unwillingness to remove abuse against MPs, candidates and other public figures", and indications that X and Meta's algorithmic recommendation systems actually give preference to incendiary and threatening content - because it boosts engagement on the platform.
Meta and X were also condemned for choosing to send "relatively junior witnesses" to the inquiry, suggesting a lack of respect for the process.
The report went on to question "their sincerity" - adding that the platforms do not appear to "understand the damaging impact they are having on democracy in the UK."
The Commons inquiry noted that having higher bars for removing threats against politicians than other individuals "normalises the idea that MPs...
Byline Times Audio Articles
The latest articles from Byline Times converted to audio for easy listening