With EU parliament scheduled for May next year, the EU executive
wants to thwart foreign interference following allegations of
meddling in the U.S. presidential election and the referendum in
which Britons voted to leave the European Union.
Earlier this year, the Commission told the tech industry,
including Facebook and Google, and the advertising industry to
draft a code of practice or face regulatory action over what it
said were their failure to do enough to remove misleading or
illegal content.
Facebook, Google, Twitter, Mozilla and advertisers have
responded with a range of measures, European Digital
Commissioner Mariya Gabriel said.
"The industry is committing to a wide range of actions, from
transparency in political advertising to the closure of fake
accounts and demonetization of purveyors of disinformation, and
we welcome this," she said in a statement.
The measures include closer scrutiny of advertising on accounts
and websites which spread fake news, rejecting payment from such
sites, helping users understand why they have been targeted by
specific ads, distinguishing ads from editorial content and
working with fact checkers to filter out fake news.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; editing by Philip Blenkinsop)
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