European Majority favours more social media regulation

(yougov.co.uk)

69 points | by snowpid 2 hours ago

13 comments

  • lastdong 1 hour ago
    From reading the page the study “examines public attitudes social media regulation and banning political advertising from social platforms.”

    The question: To what extent, if at all, would you support or oppose banning political adverts from being shown on social media platforms?

    They conclude with: Voters for far-right parties are frequently less likely to support banning of political advertising on social media … and less likely to think regulations are too lax … typically less likely to think social media regulations are too relaxed (with Italy being an exception).

    • miroljub 1 hour ago
      > They conclude with: Voters for far-right parties are frequently less likely to support banning of political advertising on social media

      Maybe the issue here is that many political options have social media and underground marketing as their only option due to heavy bias and censorship on European traditional media.

      Even the term used here "far right" is an euphemism for opinions not approved by governing European regimes.

      • fancyfredbot 57 minutes ago
        We can see specifically which parties You Gov classify as far right.

        AfD in Germany. Le Pen in France. Fratelli d’Italia in Italy. VOX in Spain. PVV in the Netherlands.

        I do not know that any of those parties would seriously disagree with their classification as far right.

        • EarlKing 51 minutes ago
          In European politics, "far right" is a dogwhistle for "anti-imperialist" or "pro-nationalist". It is otherwise a semantic void into which you can pour whatever prejudices you have against the proletariat and be assured that the state and its apparatchiks will happily reward you for airing them as long as you perpetuate the label of "far right" against their designated class enemies.
          • fancyfredbot 40 minutes ago
            For the purposes of the survey the term refers to a specific list of specific parties. There's no semantic void here!
          • snowpid 47 minutes ago
            I dont think the proletariat will beat up jews or gay men on the street which is one assoziation I have for far right.
            • miroljub 39 minutes ago
              You would be surprised that "far right" AfD is the most pro Jew party in Germany, polling at first place among Jews.

              AfD party later is gay and merited with a coloured migrant lay.

              But hey, they beat gays and Jews. Probably kick kittens and puppies too.

            • EarlKing 41 minutes ago
              Yes, that is an opinion you are supposed to have. You are supposed to associate the regime's class enemies with nazis and communists so that their claims can be dismissed without a single rational thought. "They beat up jews and gays!" is a great way to avoid having a difficult conversation about the regime's blatantly hostile policies against their own people.
              • snowpid 26 minutes ago
                I just listen to AfD politicians speeches and read the wikipedia articles about Nazi time in Germany. And I draw my conclusions.
              • saubeidl 39 minutes ago
                Why would I dismiss communists, the only people ever fighting for our interests?
      • rorylawless 1 hour ago
        What collective term would you use to describe the parties referenced in the poll?
      • koiueo 1 hour ago
        "Regime" is a popular among populists euphemism for elected governments they wish to topple.
        • p2detar 1 hour ago
          I like Encyclopedia Britannica‘s definition [0]:

          > It [regime] is used colloquially by some, such as government officials, media journalists, and policy makers, when referring to governments that they believe are repressive, undemocratic, or illegitimate or simply do not square with the person’s own view of the world.

          0 - https://www.britannica.com/topic/regime

        • miroljub 47 minutes ago
          I use regime for my government exactly because that's how they call governments they don't like.

          Seems like they don't like when their citizens apply the same terminology.

      • snowpid 1 hour ago
        Maybe the "far right" is a good description. E.g. AfD. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_f%C3%BCr_Deutschla...
        • miroljub 45 minutes ago
          Which of actual AfD policies are actually far right?

          EDIT: I am ignoring this link since its main source is Corrective, propaganda outlet funded by the German regime.

          • master-lincoln 35 minutes ago
            Not sure about their policies, but there have been many expressions from AfD politicians which are not in line with the German constitution.

            https://afd-verbot.de/beweise

          • saubeidl 39 minutes ago
          • snowpid 40 minutes ago
            you are here https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/innenpolitik/afd-verfassung... "EDIT: I am ignoring this link since its main source is Corrective, propaganda outlet funded by the German regime" Maybe they just publish what you don't like. They are a left outlet but certainly not pro government.
          • ben_w 31 minutes ago
            > EDIT: I am ignoring this link since its main source is Corrective, propaganda outlet funded by the German regime.

            Well, if you ignore all the evidence you consider inconvenient, you could, you know, read their own self-description as "right wing" and combine that with the observation of them being too right wing for the other right wing parties.

          • gloryjulio 40 minutes ago
            Whitewashing nazi issues(not the casual nazi labels we have seen these days, but the actual Nazi Germany) would be considered far right
      • jknoepfler 1 hour ago
        "Far right" isn't a euphemism for anything, it's exactly what it is. Countries that collapsed into actual fascism (e.g. Germany, Italy, Spain) within living memory, which then spent the subsequent century abutting the monstrosity of a totalitarian Communist regime ("far left") are indeed reluctant to air "far right" and "far left" views because they understand how they play out in practice: global war killing tens of millions, millions of civilians dead at the hands of their own state-sponsored militaries, a legacy of atrocity that will never wash clean, utter economic and cultural devastation echoing for decades... just an absolutely sickening inversion of the human spirit and what people want to believe in as citizens.

        "Far right" views are far right views. They are morally repulsive in the extreme. We've witnessed the consequences before.

    • llmslave2 37 minutes ago
      Somehow the modern right are the most opposed to government intervention these days, so I would expect them to be the majority in opposition to almost any proposed regulation or legislation, regardless of the contents.
      • snowpid 34 minutes ago
        EU commision has a centre right head. Germany has a centre right head. Italy has Meloni. Yet most people in these countries want more social media regulation.
  • vegabook 1 hour ago
    Note how lots of slicing is provided on a bunch of dimensions except the one that really matters: age groups. Fully willing to bet 60+ is both more likely to answer these surveys and very pro-censorship. If we weighted this survey by remaining life expectancy I bet the results would be inverted.
    • asgraham 59 minutes ago
      The irony is that youth are simulatenously the biggest consumers of (new) social media, and the staunchest haters [EDIT: this is directly contradicted by the research article I found below…]. I can’t find the source so take it with a grain of salt, but I’ve read that something like 80% of TikTok users under some age think they’d be happier if it didn’t exist and/or wish it didn’t exist.

      I don’t think this is really an issue of censorship to a lot of people (though that may be how it shakes out in the government) but rather of control over their digital environment and sanity.

      EDIT: I don’t think this is what I’m remembering, but it has concrete numbers somewhat lower than I thought (48% of teens think social media harms people their age, but only 14% think it harms them personally) https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2025/04/22/teens-social...

      • throw-the-towel 24 minutes ago
        It's not even irony? They want to quit, but it's too hard.
    • password54321 54 minutes ago
      Maybe we should listen to those that have more experience and perspective of living without social media as they can see the difference of having/not having it more clearly?
      • adventured 52 minutes ago
        Or they fail to properly grasp its value accordingly.
    • schmookeeg 1 hour ago
      I assume people in government, at some level, are weighting constituent inputs by taxes paid. Which keeps it upright. :)
      • Terr_ 46 minutes ago
        There's absolutely weighing on money, but it's not from taxes.

        They'll be weighing constituents by their ability and willingness to give campaign donations and other favors.

    • snowpid 1 hour ago
      Interesting, that you equal social media regulation = pro censorship. Btw every age group over 30 has a majority to imitate Australian model in Germany. Even lower 30 there is only a small relative majority against it. So no, your hypothesis for Germany is wrong. https://www.bild.de/politik/inland/social-media-verbot-deuts...
      • carlosjobim 55 minutes ago
        It's in the name. Any media regulation is some kind of censorship.
        • exceptione 14 minutes ago
          If your body clears out cancer cells, that is also censorship.

          Paradox of Tolerance. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_tolerance

          Participating in a society means social contract, not: I have the absolute right to sink the boat so that everyone dies.

        • snowpid 53 minutes ago
          No it is not necessarily. For example forcing to have a chronical timeline on followers would be strong social media regulation but no censorship even in the broadest terms.
          • llmslave2 42 minutes ago
            If I'm unable to publish something that I otherwise would, that is de facto censorship.
            • snowpid 35 minutes ago
              Your example is not a dismiss of my argumentation.
              • llmslave2 20 minutes ago
                It's not a dismissal, it's a refutation.
  • andsoitis 2 hours ago
    > favors more tech regulation

    You mean "social media regulation". Not "tech regulation".

    • nis0s 2 hours ago
      I think they might also mean surveillance tech, like plate readers and facial recognition.
      • fancyfredbot 1 hour ago
        The article contains the questions they asked. The questions are only asking about social media. Specifically whether social media is sufficiently regulated and whether political advertising should be allowed on social media.

        It does not mention surveillance, and it's not about tech in general. The title is misleading. (Edit: the OP kindly updated the title and it's no longer misleading)

        • bilbo0s 1 hour ago
          I'm almost positive a lot of HN Users don't read the studies they comment on. They probably don't even read the articles.

          Which, ironically, given the topic of this post, speaks to the kinds of pathologies we find out on social media these days.

          • andersa 1 hour ago
            The comments are often more interesting than the original articles.
      • amarant 1 hour ago
        Social media tech, and surveillance tech, but I repeat myself
      • notahacker 1 hour ago
        And "don't build Skynet[1] or LLM overlords that can overpower us through the sheer power of their intellect"

        [1]the UK calls its military satcomms network that, but we've always been different...

    • alphager 1 hour ago
      Not just social media. Amazon misusing is monopoly powers is also smack in the middle of the target.
    • snowpid 1 hour ago
      changed it. Thanks.
  • ThinkBeat 1 hour ago
    I think we should shut down the current crop of social media but that isn't going to happen anytime soon.

    I think an easier way to achieves instead of imposing this on everyone. Social media companies should be required to add paid tier where the individual user can block the types of the user does not want to see, (or just block all of them).

    In some places perhaps the government would ban "free social media" and only allow the paid tier to operate.

    This in the best case would make the price reasonably low, if the social media company does not want to lose a lot of users. Perhaps even subsidised. At which point the goal set above is achieved.

    • phatfish 34 minutes ago
      It should be regulated similar to online gambling in the UK (so barely, but it is a start).

      The key being age verification. Under 18, or maybe 16 accounts have: Mandatory blackout periods (after 9pm most account functions stop working, parents could set this more aggressively if they cared about the child's studies). Interaction limits like time spent on feeds, type of content that will appear in feeds, number of friends, visibility of comments ect. Only one account allowed and enforcement taken seriously.

      Over 16/18s should have the option to "time themselves out" for a chosen period with their account going into a limited mode where feeds no longer work . Similar to the option problem gamblers have where gambling sites are supposed to stop them playing if they block themselves. Maybe when someone needs to focus for exams or a work commitment.

      Sure kids will try and get round limits, but I think when you have investment in a main account it would be something you would want to keep, so the threat of loosing it would be real.

    • JumpCrisscross 29 minutes ago
      > we should shut down the current crop of social media but that isn't going to happen anytime soon

      If you concede in your first sentence, obviously not.

      It’s happened in Australia. It’s building in America. And I think there are enough European countries

  • grigio 13 minutes ago
    yes, majority of EU censorship is in favor of mainstream propaganda
  • snowpid 1 hour ago
    I've changed the title to be more precise (from tech regulation to social media regulation).

    It's important though, that attempts from foreign governmental entities (you might guess which country) might backfire if it's against popular policy decisions. I'm not sure if this foreign government is aware of it.

  • ascii0eks84 20 minutes ago
    I don't condone more regulation if it means decreasing the public's voice. Some things a society should endure in order to LEARN or GROW as a society or a person. There are things worth keeping out of that sphere but it's minimally relevant to this legal push. After all "far right" is not the issue, it's far left.
  • gbanfalvi 1 hour ago
    The questions seem more focused around social media but I wish there were more safeguards to stop us (I’m talking as an EU citizen) from crashing and burning when the AI bubble pops.
  • nomendos 1 hour ago
    Make no mistake nor be mislead that this is the slippery slope to Huxley + Orwel's 84
    • 4ndrewl 50 minutes ago
      You need different slippery slopes as they're two different visions of a future (or rather past in Orwell's case)
      • SiempreViernes 25 minutes ago
        With the slop slope everywhere goes to the same thing, which is how the poster could write that comment: by thinking sloppily.
  • saubeidl 46 minutes ago
    As a European, I think we should block X and Meta.

    They're cesspools of far-right propaganda, American and Russian disinformation and psychological warfare on our population.

    Democracy has to defend itself. We shouldn't just let foreign despots and their oligarchs walk all over us with their cyberweapons.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defensive_democracy

    • ascii0eks84 11 minutes ago
      I think you're either misinformed or a far-left troll. The issue I see is demonization of a vision of a single company but the way I see it X has truth-first approach objectively. Meta is a cesspool of lies. I see my post can be seen in the same way. Can we find a middle ground? That could perhaps solve the issue on larger scale.
  • FridayoLeary 1 hour ago
    This is the reason the UK voted for Brexit /s
    • stronglikedan 1 hour ago
      Yeah, the EU isn't quite authoritarian enough for the UK anymore.
      • EarlKing 50 minutes ago
        Europe: <does something authoritarian> UK: "Hold my tea."
  • i_love_retros 1 hour ago
    [flagged]
    • stronglikedan 1 hour ago
      Europe who? We're doing great on this side of the pond.
      • i_love_retros 5 minutes ago
        I live on your side of the pond and and we are not doing great at all. Can't bullshit me son. No one is happy. Job market is dead. Country being run by a bunch of lunatic christian nationalists who don't know how to run a country. President is falling rapidly in polls and resorting to murder and piracy in the Caribbean to distract people from the forthcoming evidence that he abused young girls with Epstein, meanwhile the rest of the world is realizing they should work together and turn their back on America... Yeah things are looking good here in the mighty US of A!
      • snowpid 1 hour ago
        so you are positive on the Trump administration?
  • EarlKing 54 minutes ago
    > European Majority

    Opinion disregarded.

    Seriously, I no longer care about the opinions of europeans when it comes to social issues, but particularly with regards to the freedom of speech, the right to privacy, obscenity, or indeed anything of import online, as the European Union (and former EU states like the UK) are transparently run like banana republics whose barely-elected bureaucrats run them like their own little ramshackle empire for their personal enrichment. For some strange reason I simply can't be bothered to entertain the opinions of people who willingly defend a system like that. Whatever the problems we may have on this side of the pond I'd much rather attend to them without europeans injecting their opinions into the matter.

    Put simply: If a 'European Majority' favors more social media regulation -- perhaps that European Majority should defederate from the internet. No, seriously, get lost. You won't be missed. If anything, we'll be happy to reclaim your IPv4 addresses.

    • fancyfredbot 44 minutes ago
      Quite right. Don't listen or you'll one day have America run like an empire for the personal enrichment of a king who doesn't respect the democratic process. That would be awful.
      • EarlKing 40 minutes ago
        People in glass houses and all.

        Seriously, though, it's not that we don't have our own problems... just that I'm tired of europeans telling the rest of us how we should run our own affairs. Inviting Europe into the Internet was a mistake.

        • fancyfredbot 35 minutes ago
          I'm not sure this article is really about Europeans trying to tell Americans how to run their affairs.

          It's the results of a survey where yougov (A European organisation) asked other Europeans how they think European social media should be regulated.

          No suggestion that laws would/could/should be changed anywhere, and especially not in America.

        • SiempreViernes 22 minutes ago
          > People in glass houses and all

          Ok, this level of self-denial is funny!

        • slater 20 minutes ago
          > I'm tired of europeans telling the rest of us how we should run our own affairs. Inviting Europe into the Internet was a mistake

          the bottomless irony of this statement XD

        • snowpid 36 minutes ago
          DSA only applies to Social Media doing in Europe. X can leave if they want. But since you believe gay men or jews aren't threated by nazis in Germany i'm not sure how to convince you anyway.
    • p2detar 47 minutes ago
      > as the European Union (and former EU states like the UK) are transparently run like banana republics whose barely-elected bureaucrats run them like their own little ramshackle empire for their personal enrichment

      Bold Statement. I wonder though, could you offer examples of places in the world today where it is being done otherwise?

    • intothemild 43 minutes ago
      This doesn't add anything to the discussion.

      Also someone whose name is Earl (norsk-germanic for King) and King.. you seem to be hell bent on an anti-european slant.. whilst having a pretty European name.

    • notrealyme123 48 minutes ago
      Social media makes teens suicidal. The companies know, but burry it. People defend those companies on the internet.
    • flumpcakes 6 minutes ago
      > the freedom of speech, the right to privacy, obscenity, or indeed anything of import online

      That's funny - the EU has better digital laws protecting the average Joe than the US could ever muster in the current climate... GDPR, DMA, etc. You decry 'censorship' and 'barely-elected bureaucrats' while the US is controlled by the billionaire class.

    • observationist 37 minutes ago
      Pretty much. Make your own internet. Put your own trillions of dollars into development and startups and innovation. Build out your own server infrastructure, satellite networks, build your own network gear.

      If they want access to American tech and services, they should have to live with American regulation and jurisdiction.

      Petty tyrannical clowns who shouldn't be running a lemonade stand, let alone "major" world governments, should have nothing to do with anything more technical than a pocket calculator unless their own people developed it.

    • embedding-shape 45 minutes ago
      For what it's worth, I'm European, and I disagree with the US on many things, but I'm not gonna dismiss all Americans' point of view because of that, regardless of how bad I think the country does things. Even the most horrible practices, can have small helpful ideas, that you can cherry-pick. But, no one is forcing you to do so, just like no one can really force us off the internet either.
      • EarlKing 39 minutes ago
        Well, technically, yes, you can be forced off the internet ... insofar as no one on this side of the pond wants to connect to you. Bam. You're gone. I long for that day so that I don't have to listen to eurocrats whinging about our politics.
        • SiempreViernes 20 minutes ago
          Why are you reading European media in the first place? We aren't forcing you and would genuinely like it of you stopped.
    • snowpid 50 minutes ago
      If you don't care, why do you comment? Recent actions show the US government cares. And it might be good to know how people would act on the actions. (Also check your assumption about other countries.)
    • adamnemecek 47 minutes ago
      > run them like their own little ramshackle empire for their personal enrichment

      If you are from the US, I’m laughing my butt off, the irony is not lost on me.

    • stavros 50 minutes ago
      OK?
    • croes 35 minutes ago
      Let me guess, you only see freedom of speech from the perspective of those who speak and not of those who don’t dare to speak because of online harassment. Strangely enough their freedom of speech doesn’t seem to matter for people who justify things like hate speech under the label of free speech.

      In a society freedoms are compromises. Absolute freedoms means all for some and nothing for the rest. The EU at least tries a balance. Countries like the US don’t seem to care and seem to favor the strongest or even sociopaths.

      • llmslave2 30 minutes ago
        > you only see freedom of speech from the perspective of those who speak and not of those who don’t dare to speak

        By this logic, when government suppresses speech that is a violation of one's rights?

        • croes 28 minutes ago
          If they suppress legal speech then yes.
          • llmslave2 22 minutes ago
            Since the government holds a monopoly on the legal system, that can be simplified to "no".
            • croes 19 minutes ago
              In a democracy that not a no. A government is made by people and laws aren’t usually made against the will of the voters.
              • llmslave2 12 minutes ago
                Democracy is majority rule, so perhaps it can be simplified to speech that the majority approve of.