The
threat by the EU executive came a year after the U.S. tech
giants together with Mozilla, Microsoft <MSFT.O> and seven
European trade bodies signed up to a voluntary code of conduct
to combat fake news in a move aimed at warding off intrusive
rules.
The Commission is now drawing up regulations known as the
Digital Services Act. This will set out liability and safety
rules for digital platforms, services and products, a move which
has already triggered fears in the tech industry of heavy-handed
intervention.
The latest monthly report from the companies showed a wide
divergence between them and provided few details on the impact
of the measures taken by the companies, EU Justice Commissioner
Vera Jourova, EU security chief Julian King and EU digital
commissioner Mariya Gabriel said in a joint statement.
"Large-scale automated propaganda and disinformation persist and
there is more work to be done under all areas of the Code. We
cannot accept this as a new normal," they said.
They called on the companies to cooperate with more independent
bodies. An independent consultant hired by the Commission will
publish its assessment early next year, followed by the EU
executive's own study.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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