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UK Culture Department Quits X Over Abuse and Misinformation

Created at 2 Jul · 5:50 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

The UK's culture and media department will cease using X, formerly Twitter, due to concerns that the platform prioritizes abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate. Secretary Lisa Nandy announced the decision, citing the site's role in promoting far-right content and inciting division.

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Who's Involved

Lisa Nandy
UK culture secretary announcing department's departure from X
Elon Musk
Owner of X, previously linked to far-right movements
Richard Hermer
Attorney general for England and Wales, previously told office to stop posting on X

↳ Why This Matters

This decision by a key UK government department to leave X signals a growing unease among policymakers about the platform's content moderation policies and its impact on public discourse and safety, potentially influencing other government bodies and public figures.

Key facts

  • The UK's culture and media department is leaving X.
  • The department cited concerns over abuse and misinformation on the platform.
  • Secretary Lisa Nandy stated X favors abuse over meaningful debate.
  • This follows a similar decision by the attorney general for England and Wales.
  • The move highlights growing concerns about content moderation on X.

The UK's Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) will stop using X, formerly Twitter, due to the platform's perceived prioritization of "abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate." Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy announced the decision, stating that the platform is "not healthy for our democracy or our communities."

The department's departure marks a significant symbolic moment, as it is responsible for media regulation in the UK. This move follows a similar decision by Richard Hermer, the attorney general for England and Wales, who instructed his office to cease posting on X. Concerns have been amplified by X's role in promoting far-right content and inciting violence, as seen in recent incidents in Southampton and Belfast.

Elon Musk, the owner of X, has faced criticism for his past remarks, including a video message to a far-right march in London suggesting that "violence is coming" to those who do not engage in politics. The platform's handling of content related to these events and its broader approach to moderation have drawn scrutiny. Nandy indicated that individuals wishing to interact with her or her department can do so via Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

Frequently asked questions

The department cited concerns that X "now favours abuse and misinformation over meaningful debate" and is unhealthy for democracy and communities.

Lisa Nandy is the UK's culture secretary, responsible for the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.

Yes, the attorney general for England and Wales, Richard Hermer, had previously told his office to stop posting on X.

Elon Musk, owner of X, has been criticized for past comments linking to far-right movements and for the platform's handling of content related to recent incidents of violence.

What Happens Next

01A new culture secretary may reassess the department's stance on X.
02Ofcom, the media regulator, continues to handle enforcement against X.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Lisa Nandy announced her department will quit X.
The department cited X's prioritization of abuse and misinformation.
The decision follows similar actions by the attorney general's office.
Nandy stated X is unhealthy for democracy and communities.
X's role in recent violence in Southampton and Belfast was highlighted.
Elon Musk's past comments linking to far-right movements were noted.

Sources

T1
Lisa Nandy quits X over fears Musk-owned site pushes ‘abuse and misinformation’The Guardian

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