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Online fragmentation: what you need to know about alternative social media platforms

March 2021 
By Tom Whitley
Recent months have seen the rise of alternative social media platforms. While many people are still getting to grips with TikTok, Reddit, Twitch and Discord, in the fast-paced online landscape these are now becoming the old kids on the block. The new kids are transforming the ways that social content is regulated, politicised and monetised.

Who has the right to inform in the digital age? Australia vs facebook and google

March 2021 
By Yana Milcheva
In July 2020, the Australian government revealed its plan to introduce a new law that would see the tech giants Facebook and Google pay news outlets for the privilege of using their content. This proposal signified a lifejacket for local news organisations, which have been sinking under the pressure of the tech giants’ market monopoly.

Watching what we say: Online content regulation in the uk

November 2020 
By Digitalis
In April 2020, BT chief executive Phil Jansen reported that 39 of his engineers had recently been assaulted by conspiracy theorists who imagined a connection between 5G networks and the spread of Covid-19. Over the same period, 80 separate attacks were reported on UK mobile network infrastructure. Of the 2,000 respondents to a 2020 Ofcom survey,…

Social networks vs Qanon: Elections in the post-truth age

November 2020 
By Yana Milcheva
The role of US social media companies in providing a platform for ‘alternative facts’ has become an issue of core public concern and, whatever the outcome of the election, these companies are likely to face significant regulatory and anti-trust focus from a political class that feels they have become too powerful. This has prompted something of …

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