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Number 10 says no ‘back-and-forth’ with Elon Musk on X

12 Aug 2024 3 minute read
Elon Musk. Photo Kirsty Wigglesworth/PA Wire

Number 10 is not going to get into a “running commentary” about its plans for social media giants and their users amid the nationwide public disorder, it has said.

Sir Keir Starmer’s spokeswoman also told journalists that the Prime Minister will not enter a tit-for-tat spat with the billionaire owner of X, formerly Twitter, Elon Musk.

After disorder in towns and cities throughout the UK, Mr Musk used the hashtag #TwoTierKeir on X – a reference to allegations police have treated some protesters more harshly than others – and he posted on Friday: “Support freedom of speech in the UK!”

He also promoted false claims Sir Keir had considered setting up detainment camps in the Falkland Islands, and suggested “civil war is inevitable”.

Engage

Taking questions from journalists, the spokeswoman said Downing Street expected ministers would engage with social media firms this week, after Technology Secretary Peter Kyle met with representatives last Monday.

“Understandably, our immediate response has been responding to the disorder and working with police but as (Sir Keir) said last week, he does agree that we’re going to need to look more broadly at social media after this disorder,” she said on Monday.

“We’re not going to get into kind of a running commentary of what that entails, but again, the focus has been at the moment on dealing with the disorder making sure that communities are safe and security.

“We would add, though, that does also involve police going after influencers and those who are stirring up hatred online alongside those who have been committing violence on our streets.”

Incitement, provoking violence and harassment offences predate X by almost 20 years, in the Public Order Act 1986, and apply both on and offline.

Police have arrested several social media users who allegedly stirred up racial hatred.

Jordan Parlour from Seacroft, Leeds, received a 20-month jail sentence after he wrote on Facebook that “every man and their dog should be smashing f***” out of a hotel, believed to have housed asylum seekers.

The 28-year-old pleaded guilty to intending to stir up racial hatred.

Tyler Kay, a 26-year-old of Ellfield Court, Northampton, received a 38-month sentence after he used X to back calls to “set fire to all the f****** hotels full of the bastards”.

Hotels

Rioters descended on hotels in Rotherham in South Yorkshire and Tamworth, near Birmingham, during the disorder, with chants of “who the f*** is Allah?” and “dirty f****** Muslims” heard at violent protests elsewhere in England.

After his meeting last week, the Technology Secretary said: “There is a significant amount of content circulating that platforms need to be dealing with at pace.

“Different companies take different approaches and I expect platforms to ensure that those seeking to spread hate online are not being facilitated and have nowhere to hide.”

The Number 10 spokeswoman said: “We continue to engage with them (social media companies). I believe there’ll be further engagement this week and it’s vital that they take their responsibilities seriously.”

Asked about Mr Musk’s comments, the spokeswoman said: “I’m not proposing to get into back-and-forth on individual comments.

“Our focus is on working with the social media companies to ensure that what is illegal offline is illegal online, as it should be.”


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Jeff
Jeff
3 months ago

Actions here from the UK government that will harm musk or admit the UK government are toothless. The bloke will taunt you and continue to spread lies and hate.

Time to stop using his products.

Jeff
Jeff
3 months ago

Oh yeah, the bloke that wants to push hate and disorder is tonight interviewing the bloke that also did that when he was president.

Adrian
Adrian
3 months ago

It is an act of sheer idiocy to put any politician in charge of policing online discourse. Make no mistake, the definition of ‘legal but harmful’ will amount to anything the Labour party decides it doesn’t want you to say. Anyway, Starmer and his clown cabal do not possess the collective intelligence to police a sea border, or defIne what a woman is: the idea that they’re going to be able outwit tech companies is laughable.

Jeff
Jeff
3 months ago
Reply to  Adrian

You tell em, bring back Dorries, now there was a intellectual giant in understanding tech.
Has she resigned yet?

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