14
Acknowledged
Concerns regarding disjointed platform approaches and weakened content moderation policies.
Conclusion
We are concerned by disjointed approaches from platforms to false and harmful content; in particular by recent moves from X and Meta to water down their Terms of Service and approach to content moderation. While there are merits to crowd-sourcing models of context provision and fact-checking—as part of a wider policy on misleading and harmful content—these platforms seem to be prioritising this method over third- party fact checking without clear evidence on whether it will adequately protect users from algorithmically amplified harm and misinformation. (Conclusion, Paragraph 40)
Government Response Summary
The government shares the committee's concerns regarding amplified misleading content and agrees more evidence is needed, stating it is looking to build its evidence base and monitoring changes, while also mentioning a future framework for researchers to access online safety data.
Government Response
Acknowledged
Government Response
Acknowledged
HM Government
Acknowledged
The government shares the Committee’s concerns regarding the amplification of misleading content online and agrees that more evidence is needed to assess the merits of different approaches to tackling misinformation. The government engages with social media companies to make clear their responsibility to keep users safe. We are closely monitoring changes to fact checking models and how they might impact UK users. We agree on the importance of research and evidence in this area and are currently looking at where we can build our evidence base on these issues. On AI driven detection of misinformation, the government ran the Deepfake Detection Challenge last year, bringing together academic, industry and government experts to develop innovative and practical solutions focused on detecting synthetic media. More widely, provisions inserted by the Data (Use and Access) Act empower DSIT’s Secretary of State to create a framework for independent researchers to access online safety data, which will – once implemented - give researchers a legislative footing to conduct their online safety research in the future.
Source
Report
2nd Report – Social media, misinformation and harmful algorithms
11 Jul 2025
HC 441
Addressee Bodies
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
Timeline
Recommendation age
0.9 yr
Report published
11 Jul 2025