Advertisement

Google regulates action by opening centres to tackle harmful online content

Google to tackle harmful content
Advertisement

Tech giant Google has announced to open a centre in order to tackle harmful online content.

The world’s most popular search engine, along with other U.S. tech giants, has drawn criticism because of the spread of illegal and harmful content via their platforms, triggering calls for more regulatory action.

The 27-country European Union has taken new tough rules to curb their powers and protect smaller rivals for removing harmful content from their platforms.

The proposed rules are expected to come into force in the next two years.

The Google Safety Engineering Center at Google’s European headquarters will focus on content responsibility and is the first in the world for the company, the company’s Director of Trust said.

Advertisement

“The new Dublin centre will be a regional hub for Google experts working to tackle the spread of illegal and harmful content and a place where we can share this work with policymakers, researchers, and regulators,” she said.

She added it would help everyone understand work with “trusted flaggers” and the way incidents are tackled whose staff will work from home for as long as lockdown restrictions require.

Also Read

The New Google Chrome is functional without Adobe Flash Player

Google recently released Chrome 88 as the latest stable version of their...

Advertisement
Read More News On

Catch all the Business News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News


Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Live News.


Advertisement
End of Story
BOL Stories of the day
Pakistan successfully launches first Hyperspectral Satellite HS-1 from China
Apple’s first foldable iPhone expected to launch till 2027
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman warns of AI investment bubble despite industry's explosive growth
Pakistan to launch first Hyperspectral Satellite from China on Oct 19
SpaceX starship completes final test flight, paving way for next generation
Stop doing this: Habits that are slowly killing your gut
Next Article
Exit mobile version