The Government has taken this timely opportunity (?!) for more announcements on the online safety bill.
They are about (1) anonymity and (2) ‘legal but harmful’.
Buckle up for another wild ride…🧵 1/n
(1) Anonymity: Govt will require larger social media sites to provide the option to block non-verified users — that means forcing Big Tech to create a new online identity system. 2/n
This duty is built on the false premise that anonymity is illegitimate and responsible for abusive behaviour.
Practically, it will create two versions of social media: one for the privileged few and one for everyone else who has legitimate reason to want to stay anonymous. 3/n
That means lesser social media access for vulnerable people who need to stay anonymous including victims of domestic abuse, whistleblowers and those in hiding from a totalitarian regime.
Or plenty others will simply not wish to join a new digital identification scheme. 4/n
(2) The Govt will also require firms to provide users the option to hide ‘legal but harmful’ material — it’s unclear how this will interact with previous plans to regulate away this material altogether. 5/n
This duty represents magical thinking – it is simply not possible to create an entirely sanitised version of the internet for some users.
There remains a serious risk that platforms will be more censorious overall in order to avoid creating two versions of their product. 6/n
These new duties will impose extraordinarily high regulatory burdens at immense costs to enterprises, that will inevitably scare away investment and tech jobs.
Every silly idea that pops into the head of a government minister should not be written into the law. 7/7
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The OECD finds that over half of the UK's inflation is demand-driven (52%), that is, loose monetary policy NOT the war in Ukraine.
This is much higher than the likes of France (42%), the US (28%), or Korea (15%) or Denmark (27%).
The Bank of England has a lot to answer for.
There's a lot of uncertainty in these findings, we should not be obsessive about the precise numbers of these findings. Nevertheless, it is notable that they believe more of the UK's inflation is driven on the demand side than on the supply side.
This sort of finding helps demolish the myth that inflation is purely caused by the war in Ukraine and Covid-related supply shocks. If that were true we would have seen price spikes in some areas, like energy, offset by relative price falls (due to lower demand) in other sectors.
🚨 The Government will today introduce the long-anticipated Online Safety Bill into Parliament.
It’s a messy and incoherent piece of legislation that will undermine free speech, privacy and innovation.
I’ll post thoughts here
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➡️ The Bill creates a ‘duty of care’ on tens of thousands of platforms to tackle illegal content, content that is harmful to children and ‘legal but harmful’ content for adults. If they fail to comply will face up to 10% global revenue fine.
😓 The central risk is that in order to not be fined companies will become overzealous in removals of both content that could be unlawful and content that is lawful but pressure is telling them to remove.
Jenny Harries has been put in charge of the organisation meant to prevent future pandemics and replace Public Health England.
Let’s take a quick look at her record during Covid-19
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5 March 2020: Harries tells Parliament that there will soon come a point when testing is no longer necessary, foreshadowing the plan to give up on preventing Covid from spreading (and allowing the population to get herd immunity through natural infection)
10 March 2020: Harries resists calls to cancel large events, saying she was "following the science" and downplay the severity of the virus by saying most will just feel "a bit rough".
The guidance in March and early April instructed doctors to discharge patients, untested, to care homes to free up beds.
There wasn't a plan to expand testing after Jenny Harris announced it was no longer necessary in mid-March.
There were tens of thousands of unnecessary deaths in care homes because the state put pressure onto homes to take Covid-positive patients. It's a total scandal.
Ministers should take responsibility for their failings not obfuscate and lie.
On 17 March, 2020, Simon Stevens wrote to all NHS trust instructing them to free up beds by discharging patients as quickly as possible.
Cummings’ remarks about Hancock and Boris will grab the most attention. But they were the least important.
The real issue is the total institutional failure.
The system was ill-prepared, overconfident, and inflexible. Bad export advice combined with operational failure.
As Cummings said, Boris and Hancock made plenty of bad decisions — but no matter who was in charge at the start of last year the results would have been similar. That’s a very frightening thought: you can’t just change the leader, the entire system is broken.
It’s not just about future pandemic threats — or even continuing failures in relation to the current threat (see India red listing). There’s a total inability to respond effectively to challenges. That issue won’t disappear.