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Wikipedia needs different safety rules, says foundation

 1 year ago
source link: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-64285220
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Wikipedia needs different safety rules, says foundation

Published
3 hours ago
A woman holding a smartphone with Wikipedia on the screen
Image source, Getty Images
By Chris Vallance
Technology reporter

Wikipedia should be treated differently to the big social media firms in the Online Safety Bill, a leading member of its foundation says.

The encyclopedia is written and edited entirely by thousands of volunteers around the world.

The Wikimedia Foundation's Rebecca MacKinnon also says a proposed change to the bill, which may pass on Tuesday, would "limit freedom of expression".

The bill aims to protect people from harmful content online.

Ms MacKinnon says the foundation is concerned about the effect of the bill on volunteer-run sites.

She told the BBC that the threat of "harsh" new criminal penalties for tech bosses "will affect not only big corporations, but also public interest websites such as Wikipedia".

The Wikipedia Foundation is the not-for-profit organisation which hosts the encyclopaedia.

Ms MacKinnon says the law should follow the EU Digital Services Act which, she argues, differentiates between centralised content moderation carried out by employees and Wikipedia-style moderation by community volunteers.

The government told the BBC the bill is designed to strike the balance between tackling harm without imposing unnecessary burdens on low-risk tech companies.

"[Regulator] Ofcom will take a reasonable and proportionate approach when monitoring and enforcing the safety duties outlined in the bill, focusing on services where the risk of harm is highest," it said.

Multi-player game

How sites are treated under the bill partly depends on their size.

But lawyers have also pointed out that some of the duties in the bill, promoted as a way to rein in big tech, will affect much smaller services where users can communicate with other users.

Neil Brown, a solicitor specialising in internet and telecoms law, told the BBC: "The bill, and the amendment, would impose pages of duties on someone who, for fun, runs their own social media or photo/video sharing server, or hosts a multi-player game which lets players chat or see each other's content or creations."

He suggests limiting the scope of the bill to the major commercial operators with multi-million pound turnover would help "remove the burden and threat to hobbyists and volunteers".

A: What are you in prison for?

B: I ran a Minecraft server.#OnlineSafetyBill pic.twitter.com/WlvPAIBFa4

— Neil Brown (@neil_neilzone) January 12, 2023
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Wikipedia is the eighth most visited website in the UK, according to data from software company Similarweb, but everything on the site is produced by volunteers, and the community decides what is acceptable.

Ms MacKinnon says it has been caught in a net designed for the likes of Facebook and Instagram where decisions are centralised.

The foundation believes in community decision making, and does not get involved with the articles, she says, but the bill could force it to intervene if a volunteer editor kept up an article which might break UK law, for example.

"It forces the foundation to break the community model, and proactively take things down," she says.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Wikipedia is banned in some countries

However, the government says a site like Wikipedia will be able to develop its own approaches to community moderation, as long as it tackles illegal content and protects children.

It is also understood that officials believe Wikipedia is unlikely to be classed as a Category 1 service, subject to the strictest rules.

Ms MacKinnon says any UK changes would affect all readers of Wikipedia in English, including those in the US, an example the "UK regulating the world", she says.

Harmful definitions

Wikipedia has articles covering topics like sexuality, pornography, drug use, and suicide, which some might feel could be harmful for children to view.

Measures in the bill mean it worries it might have to check the ages of users, which would require collecting more information about readers, which Wikipedia tries to avoid.

For example, Ms MacKinnon says the page about the Russian invasion of Ukraine is illegal in Russia.

Age verification could mean collecting information on readers which might then be requested by a government or be hacked.

"It actually ultimately exposes everyone, including children to greater harm," she says.

Blunt instrument

More than 40 cross-party MPs are backing the change to make social media bosses face prison if they fail to protect children from damaging online content.

And a number of prominent children's charities and campaigners are lending their support.

It’s increasingly inevitable @RishiSunak will need to bring senior manager liability into the #OnlineSafetyBill to avoid a Commons defeat. Some weekend thoughts from me on why this is needed (although why the devil is firmly in the detail): https://t.co/GTCURn8aeI

— Andy Burrows (@_andyburrows) January 15, 2023
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Industry body TechUK, say the amendment will be seen as a "very open-ended risk by investors" and could mean companies do not invest and locate senior talent in the UK.

The government is expected to set out its response to the amendment on Tuesday.

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