The European Commission has accused Google, Twitter and Facebook for failing to provide enough details to cut disinformation of their services.
The EU Commission code of practice against disinformation, to which all three tech firms signed up to, must provide the Commission with monthly updates of their actions, ahead of EU parliament elections in May.
However, the Commission said Google, Twitter and Facebook were doing work on this, but there is โroom for improvement for all signatories.โ
Andrus Ansip, vice-president for the digital single market, Mariya Gabriel, commissioner for the digital economy and society, Vera Jourova, commissioner for justice, consumers and gender equality; Julian King, commissioner for the security union all gave a joint statement
The group said, โThe online platforms, which signed the Code of Practice, are rolling out their policies in Europe to support the integrity of elections.
โThis includes better scrutiny of advertisement placements, transparency tools for political advertising, and measures to identify and block inauthentic behaviour on their services.
โHowever, we need to see more progress on the commitments made by online platforms to fight disinformation.
โPlatforms have not provided enough details showing that new policies and tools are being deployed in a timely manner and with sufficient resources across all EU member states. The reports provide too little information on the actual results of the measures already taken.โ
โThe platforms have failed to identify specific benchmarks that would enable the tracking and measurement of progress in the EU,โ the commission said.
โThe quality of the information provided varies from one signatory of the code to another depending on the commitment areas covered by each report. This clearly shows that there is room for improvement for all signatories.
โThe electoral campaigns ahead of the European elections will start in earnest in March. We encourage the platforms to accelerate their efforts as we are concerned by the situation.
โWe urge Facebook, Google and Twitter to do more across all member states to help ensure the integrity of the European Parliament elections in May 2019.
โWe also encourage platforms to strengthen their co-operation with fact-checkers and academic researchers to detect disinformation campaigns and make fact-checked content more visible and widespread.โ
We need to see more progress on the commitments made by online platforms to fight disinformation.
We encourage them to accelerate their efforts, ahead of the #EUelections2019. Find out more here โ https://t.co/Nt69Y55lAZ #EUvsDisinfo pic.twitter.com/5DvXmhEeMO— European Commission ๐ช๐บ (@EU_Commission) February 28, 2019
A spokeswoman for Facebook said, โWe submitted our January report to the EU Code of Practice on Disinformation outlining recent progress weโve made in implementing the code.
โIn January, weโve been focused on the development of our political ads authorisation process, ad labelling, the ad archive service, and the expansion of our elections integrity programme.
โWe are in the process of developing performance indicators around political advertising, but these will only become available when the ads archive launches outside the US.
โWith regards to the number of fake accounts we remove from Facebook, we provide updates on this in our twice-yearly transparency report. For example, we removed 1.5bn fake accounts between April and September 2018.
โWe remain committed to submitting reports to the European Commission to highlight the progress weโre making in each area outlined in the code.โ
A spokesman for Twitter said, โOur reports will continue to highlight our efforts to ensure security, integrity and transparency in the lead-up to the EU elections in May.
โWe look forward to detailing in our next monthly report new rules on political campaign ads transparency for the elections, which we announced last week.โ
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