Elon Musk ‘accountable to no one,’ Britain’s tech minister says after X owner’s comments on UK riots

Elon Musk ‘accountable to no one,’ Britain’s tech minister says after X owner’s comments on UK riots


Harun Ozalp | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Elon Musk is “the one person who is accountable to no one” and his impact on public discourse should not be underestimated, the U.K.’s technology minister said in an interview with the Times newspaper, adding to recent criticisms of the technology billionaire from senior government officials.

Peter Kyle, secretary of science, innovation and technology, said that Musk has the power to influence major world affairs — even the war between Russia and Ukraine.”

Kyle added that the relationship Britain has with companies such as X and other major social media firms, “is much more akin to the negotiations with fellow secretaries of state in other countries, simply because of the scale and scope that they have.”

His comments follow controversial remarks from Musk about U.K. affairs. The entrepreneur, who owns the X social media site and is CEO of electric vehicle maker Tesla, on Sunday made a post on his platform suggesting immigration would lead to civil war in the U.K. amid riots taking place across the country.

Kyle is not the only government official levelling criticism at Musk. On Monday, the British Prime Minister’s official spokesperson said there was “no justification” for comments like those made by X’s owner and executive chairman.

Meanwhile, U.K. courts minister Heidi Alexander on Tuesday said in response to Musk’s comments that anyone with a platform on social media should “behave responsibly” with that platform and that language associating the riots with civil war is “totally unjustified.”

Kyle has held conversations with social media firms including TikTok, Facebook’s parent company Meta, Google and X in relation to the riots, to remind them of their responsibility to tackle misinformation online.

The U.K. last year passed the Online Safety Act, a landmark law that seeks to ramp up enforcement on illegal and harmful content on the internet.

However, Ofcom, the regulator tasked with enforcing the law, is unable to take action against companies for allowing harmful posts inciting the ongoing riots as not all the powers from the act have come into force yet.

Ofcom told CNBC it is moving quickly to implement the act so that it can be enforced as soon as possible, however, new duties on tech firms requiring them by law to actively police their platforms won’t fully come into force until 2025.

For more on Kyle’s comments about Musk, you can read the original Times report here.



Source

These stocks, including Oracle, are among the most overbought on Wall Street
World

These stocks, including Oracle, are among the most overbought on Wall Street

Several stocks could soon be due for pullbacks after seeing sizable gains this week, according to a widely-used technical indicator. Stocks took a hit Friday after Israel launched a series of airstrikes on Iran in the largest attack on the Islamic Republic since the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s. Following Israel’s attack, which killed at […]

Read More
Goldman Sachs says buy these five stocks that are set to rally
World

Goldman Sachs says buy these five stocks that are set to rally

Goldman Sachs this week named several stocks that analysts at the investment bank say have more room to run. The Wall Street firm says these companies are resilient and that investors should quickly buy them. CNBC Pro combed through Goldman Sachs research to find five buy-rated stocks that it says have more upside. They include: […]

Read More
Middle East conflict barely rattles resilient stock market
World

Middle East conflict barely rattles resilient stock market

Did the market’s stiff upper lip finally waver on Friday, as a characteristic rush to buy a morning dip failed by the close in the face of air attacks between Israel and Iran? Things will have to slacken a bit more from here to draw this conclusion, given that the S & P 500 lost […]

Read More