Better Moderation of Hate Speech on Social Media: A Sri Lankan Case Study for Reputational-Cost Approaches
Date
2021-07Author
Jayasinha, Uween
de Mel, Nishan
Legal Team, Verité Research
Series
Strategy Brief;July 2021Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
As social media becomes more involved in personal, business, and political relations, it has become increasingly important to prevent the spread of hate speech and disinformation on social media. At present, hate speech and disinformation is moderated on social media by: (1) voluntary self-regulation by service providers, and (2) government regulation that imposes obligations and liability on users and service providers. In light of the numerous lapses in content moderation and the ever present of risk of censorship through government regulation of social media, several questions have arisen on how content moderation can be improved.
This strategy brief presents a case study of content moderation in Sri Lanka and the risks presented by relying on mechanisms based on voluntary self-regulation and government regulation. Based on this case study, this brief presents an alternative approach that seeks to drive content moderation by creating ‘reputational-costs’ for social media companies that fail to moderate hate speech and disinformation. The brief also presents a strategy that is centered around developing vertical accountability mechanisms capable of generating national and global narratives against lapses in content moderation by social media companies.
Note
Description
33p. The Legal Team of Verité Research compiled this study. The principal authors are Uween Jayasinha and Nishan de Mel.
Research support was provided by Sierra Amarasiri and Shamana Amjah.
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- Research Reports [42]
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