The EU must stand up to Musk and Zuckerberg

Authored by lemonde.fr and submitted by LeMonde_en
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A sudden offensive from the west has taken Europeans, more accustomed to keeping an eye on their eastern front, by surprise. In the run-up to Donald Trump's arrival in the White House on January 20, Europe, its political establishment and its vision of social media have been the target of a barrage of attacks and threats, sometimes from the president-elect himself, sometimes from his high-tech clique.

The most virulent is undoubtedly Elon Musk, industrial heavyweight and owner of the social media network X which he acquired for $44 billion, and on which he attacked the British and German governments. Leveraging the power of his algorithms, he bombarded Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer with spurious accusations that he had protected immigrant pedophile gangs and called for his resignation.

In Germany, in the midst of the election campaign, he called for people to vote for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. On Thursday, January 9, Musk interviewed the leader of the AfD, Alice Weidel, for an hour and a quarter on X. She suddenly presented her party as "libertarian" and "conservative."

European leaders were then confronted with another type of aggression – a territorial one – when Trump reiterated his desire to conquer Greenland, a territory under Danish sovereignty. Then it was Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who controls Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, who attacked what he described as "institutionalized censorship" by "European laws" to limit freedom of expression.

Bewildered, European leaders are slow to react collectively. They were expecting a cascade of tariffs from the incoming Trump administration, but now they are subjected to ideological fire. The statement that was eventually issued Thursday evening – on X of all places! – by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa could not hide their disquiet: "The US is one of our closest partners and we are committed to strengthening the Transatlantic bond," they wrote, while recalling Europe's "fundamental democratic values."

A distinction needs to be made between the relationship with the future president of the country that ensures the security of its European allies and the response to be given to its social media CEOs, however close they may be to said president. Trump is not Vladimir Putin and, as shown by his change of position on the prospect of a settlement to the war in Ukraine, which he now expects in months rather than hours, he is not deaf to the principle of reality. But, in both cases, firmness is required. Firstly, recalling the principle of territorial sovereignty is the minimum solidarity that should be shown to Denmark, a member of the European Union (EU).

Secondly, putting Musk and Zuckerberg back in their place is a way of signaling to Trump that the hunting season is not open in Europe. Yes, Musk's offensive is political, as President Emmanuel Macron noted, and it interferes with our electoral processes. Yes, the EU has the regulatory tools to reconcile freedom of expression and democratic values on its sovereign territory, given its history and culture. We must make unwavering use of them.

Read more Subscribers only French minister to Musk and Zuckerberg: 'Stop instrumentalizing freedom of speech'

endallbeallknowitall on January 10th, 2025 at 16:32 UTC »

EU has been sleeping during the tech revolution as we were sleeping in weapons and energy markets, always hoping for the US to be the big ally of freedom and that everything that came from there would be positive. Guess it might be to little to late to wake up now tbh.

FormerKarmaKing on January 10th, 2025 at 15:33 UTC »

> 2 min read

Conflating Musk, Trump and Zuckerberg into one variable to be managed is a gross over-simplification.

For example, if Meta decided not to comply with some future EU regulation, that would actually be a huge opportunity for a(n) EU company. Likewise for Musk, may he speed-run himself to mars.

Reason being that the EU has such a poor environment for startups, both in terms of regulations and investment, that only a self-goal by the incumbents.

...and that's to say nothing of the author's complete disregard for freedom of speech.

But also:

> Translation of an original article published in French on lemonde.fr; the publisher may only be liable for the French version.

Le Monde, with all of their editorial staff, can't even vouch for a revenue-seeking translation of their own in-house content that takes Meta to task for not fact-checking billions of people.

There are WikiHow articles with more intellectual rigor than this piece.

AnomalyNexus on January 10th, 2025 at 14:58 UTC »

No doubt the east is delighted by this new fracturing in the western order