Save our socials!
To the European Commission, European Parliament and Head's of Government
Petition
The free internet is being abolished – it has been taken over by the big tech monopolies. The growing dominance of platform companies for information and exchange is leading to a concentration of opinion power that is jeopardising our democracy.
In the digital space, a few predominantly US and Chinese tech companies control information and public debate. Their platforms do not allow unrestricted access, as users have to disclose their most personal data in order to access them. At the same time, algorithms untransparently filter what users get to see and what they don’t – algorithms that only follow the laws of the attention economy, freed from the common good and journalistic quality standards. With a flood of hate, malice, agitation and disinformation, a few monopoly platforms are destroying our democracies and endangering everyone.
Meanwhile, independent services are increasingly losing their audience and their financial basis through their own distribution channels: journalism is becoming a loss-making business because big tech companies are capturing the majority of advertising revenue. Journalists and media companies have to subordinate themselves and their content to the platforms and their algorithms. Individual creatives and other stakeholders are also becoming increasingly dependent.
The rapid introduction of generative AI is accelerating this process. Users have little reason to visit the websites of an original source because AI-supported search engines summarise the content – on the basis of non-transparent technical processes that change the tenor or statements, often in breach of copyright. These AI services are likely to cement the supremacy of the platform companies and further marginalise journalistic media before they die out.
The signatories see an urgent need for action for everyone, for companies, associations, social institutions and politics at national and European level. Democracy-enhancing offerings must be expanded, and platform monopolies that are harmful to democracy should lose their massive privileges immediately.
Around 100 personalities from the worlds of culture, business and media have come together to form the Save Social initiative. Together, they propose ten concrete steps to free the internet from the dominance of monopoly corporations and strengthen alternative platforms for information and debate.
- We strengthen alternatives with good content
Content financed with public funds must also be fully available at least on those platforms, which are based on open and recognised standards and protocols. Politicians, public authorities, universities, research institutions, libraries and public broadcasters are obliged to make all content available on these platforms without exception. They must open up their own services, such as media libraries, to these platforms via protocols.
- We strengthen alternatives structurally
Public institutions (politics, authorities, universities, libraries, public broadcasters and others) currently produce exclusive content for Instagram, TikTok and other monopolistic platforms at great expense. In future, they will be obliged to invest at least the same financial and structural effort in the production of content and its distribution for these open digital platforms. Supervisory bodies will examine at regular intervals whether the proportion of expenditure on open platforms can be increased without jeopardising the required reach of the services.
- We invest in the development and usability of alternatives
The federal and state governments are obliged to massively expand their investments in the development and strengthening of these open platforms and protocols as well as services based on them. In particular, the aim is to improve their usability, enable growth through sufficient technical infrastructure and increase market penetration through marketing. In addition, the federal and state governments are creating citizens‘ committees to define and monitor the requirements for such democracy-enhancing offerings.
- We enable services that benefit from a commitment to the common good
A legal framework will be created for operators of democracy-enhancing platforms and services in which they can operate on a non-profit basis.
- We improve media education
Educational institutions, especially schools and providers of media literacy programmes, are obliged to primarily teach the use of open and democracy-enhancing platforms and networks. At the same time, the use of hardware and services offered by mEonopolistic platforms in educational institutions will be restricted with the aim of avoiding them altogether wherever possible. In addition, teaching and learning content from the state education system is to be made available on open platforms, provided that the authors have granted the necessary rights.
- We create diversity and transparency
Upper market share limits are introduced for large platforms, above which parts of the company must be sold or content and distribution channels must be separated. A digital tax will be levied on tech giants7 to finance an information and discussion infrastructure that strengthens democracy as well as quality journalism.
- We open up platforms
Large platforms must introduce open standards and interoperability between services8 so that users can utilise content regardless of the manufacturer and do not lose their own content when switching services. Such a change of service must also be facilitated by complete download options for own content.
- We enable visibility
Today, monopolistic platforms penalise links that refer to content outside of these platforms, such as own websites, for example through lower reach or less visibility. In future, such outlinks must no longer lead to a disadvantage in the distribution of content so that users can link to content outside the platforms without disadvantages. Large platforms must transparently disclose their algorithms for verification purposes.
- We give communities a real voice
Independent supervisory bodies must monitor compliance with the above measures with the aim of curbing monopoly positions, criminal statements and targeted disinformation and election manipulation. The platforms must employ easily accessible contact persons via several channels who act quickly in the event of account blocking, hate speech or defamation.
- Anyone who earns money with content must take responsibility
To this day, platforms are even allowed to monetise criminal content (racism, discrimination, Holocaust denial, etc.). The liability privilege for particularly large platforms must be scrutinised. Just as media groups are responsible for content under press law, platforms must assume responsibility and liability for their content.
Why is this important?
You click on a video. Then another. And another. But who’s really deciding what comes next?
Platforms like Meta, Google and TikTok use algorithms designed to maximise profit — not truth. [1] Truth sinks to the bottom of your feed. Lies rise to the top. And with Artificial Intelligence generating content at scale, even reality starts to blur.
It doesn’t have to be this way. But it won’t change on its own. This is where you come in.
A movement of 100 leading figures from business, science and culture — joined by over 200,000 supporters — is calling for an end to Big Tech’s unchecked power. [2]
Some European leaders are listening. But without strong public pressure, it’s rare politicians get to the bottom of things. [3]
Add your voice to demand a publicly owned Internet so that we are not at the mercy of multi millionaire moguls anymore.
References:
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zd9tt39
- https://savesocial.eu/en/
- https://www.politico.eu/article/european-commission-ursula-von-der-leyen-warns-x-meta-tiktok-rules-ceo/
https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-fines-apple-meta-breaking-europe-digital-markets-act-dma/