After Election Chaos, Romania Proposes Platforms Invent Magic Wand As Content Moderation Solution

from the yeah,-sure,-that'll-work dept

When faced with a difficult technology policy challenge, policymakers can respond in one of two ways: with careful analysis of what’s technically possible, or by demanding Silicon Valley simply wave a magic wand and make all problems disappear. Romania has chosen… the latter.

The backstory here is pretty straightforward: A Russian-supporting candidate leveraged TikTok to build surprising momentum in Romania’s presidential election. The results were controversial enough to get thrown out. And now Romania wants to make sure this never happens again by… well, by proposing content moderation rules that seem designed to ensure no social platform will ever operate in Romania again.

The country banned the candidate, the far-right Calin Georgescu, from running in the rematch, upsetting both Russia and its new best friend, the United States government.

The new regulations read like someone with zero understanding of content moderation took the EU’s Digital Services Act, already a challenging set of rules, and decided to make it exponentially more impossible. How impossible? Just look at what kind of wackiness Romania is actually proposing:

  • The Romanian proposal caps the spread of potentially harmful content to 150 users, whereas the DSA only requires platforms to mitigate systemic risks.
  • The proposal mandates faster content removal of illegal content – within 15 minutes. The DSA only requires platforms to act “expeditiously” without a fixed deadline.
  • Platforms must classify content within 15 minutes, which is not required under the DSA.
  • If more than 30% of user-reported content is confirmed as illegal, platforms are fined 1% of turnover. The DSA imposes fines up to 6% of global turnover but does not use a user-report validation metric.

This is all, to put it mildly, nonsense.

These requirements fundamentally misunderstand both how content spreads online and how human nature works. The idea that platforms can somehow prevent “harmful” content (itself a nebulous and subjective term) from reaching more than 150 users ignores both the technical reality of how social networks function and the practical impossibility of accurately classifying content within minutes of it being posted. Even with unlimited resources and perfect AI (neither of which exist), these goals would remain impossible.

This would be difficult enough to do with a single piece of content. Now scale it up to many millions of pieces of content. Every day.

All rules like this are likely to do is have various apps block Romania entirely. And, perhaps that’s the goal. But it hardly seems like a productive approach.

Of course, as the report on this notes, the supporters of this approach somehow think that AI can solve it all:

Regarding the feasibility of these obligations, the explanatory memorandum of the proposal suggests that companies should be capable of triaging illegal content using artificial intelligence, which has demonstrated efficiency in recent studies.

This reflects the increasingly common fallacy that artificial intelligence is just the newest way to “nerd harder” — a magic wand that can somehow solve impossible content moderation challenges. The legal analysis linked above gives a quite understated warning that using AI to try to meet these requirements “could lead to errors and potentially infringe on human expression,” which barely scratches the surface of the problem.

What’s particularly ironic here is that Romania’s proposal simultaneously (1) demonstrates deep distrust of social media platforms while (2) demanding those same platforms deploy AI systems with godlike capabilities to perfectly moderate content. It’s asking companies they don’t trust to somehow build impossible technology they don’t understand.

Romania’s concerns about election interference are legitimate — they can point to very real harm from their recent election chaos. But responding with technically impossible demands isn’t just ineffective, it’s counterproductive. It distracts from developing actual solutions while creating compliance requirements that will likely drive services to simply block Romanian users entirely.

What we need instead are policymakers who understand both the real challenges of content moderation at scale and the actual capabilities and limitations of current technology. Until then, we’ll keep seeing this cycle: legitimate problems leading to impossible demands, followed by either widespread censorship or complete platform withdrawal. Neither outcome serves Romanian citizens or democracy.

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Comments on “After Election Chaos, Romania Proposes Platforms Invent Magic Wand As Content Moderation Solution”

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25 Comments
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

I can’t even catastrophize here

You shouldn’t be doing it for anything. All it does is make you feel bad and helps you make everyone else try to feel as bad as you do so you won’t feel alone. It’s narcissism disguised as depth. I get that things suck more than a Hoover right now, but acting like every new bit of bad news is the actual end of the world when it’s not even close to that doesn’t do anything for you but inflict unnecessary self-suffering that you’ll inevitably feel should be inflicted upon others. Stop catastrophizing and grow the fuck up.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Do you think this was an earnest expression of the sentiment that AC loves to catastrophize about things but can’t manage to do so about this? This is like if they said “I can’t overstate how bad these ideas are” and then you spent a paragraph finger-wagging about how you should ACTUALLY never overstate anything.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Two things.

  1. This site has had more than its fair share of catastrophizers over the past few months, mostly related to the possible repeal of Section 230.
  2. Even if this is a case where the OP wasn’t one of those “woe is me” pity-seeking assholes, my point still stands and I won’t apologize for both making it and meaning it.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

And I hate to reply to myself like this, but I do want to add one more point.

When Trump won the election last year, I committed the same sin of catastrophizing in a private Discord server I’m on. I started doing the “woe is me, the sky is falling, we’re all really fucked now” bullshit that the 230 catastrophizers have been doing here. And none of it⁠—not a single syllable or second⁠—made me feel any better. Only after having a conversation with other people on that Discord and calming down did I feel at least how I did before the election was called for Trump. (I don’t want to say “better” because that’s a bit much for this situation.)

Defeatism is fool-proof because all you have to do is sit back and let the worst happen. Optimism requires work. And even if alls I can do is chime in here with something because I otherwise lack the resources to do anything more meaningful, I’ll do that⁠—partly because it keeps me grounded, partly because I like this site and its regular commenter base.

I’m not perfect, and I’m not expecting perfection from others. Everyone’s gonna slip into despair every once in a while. But slipping once is a mistake or an accident that you can walk away from. Wallowing in misery is a choice⁠—and it’s a choice to effectively harm yourself, psychologically if not physically, because you feel powerless and helpless to change anything.

I keep saying shit like “worry about only the things you have the power to change” because that’s all any of us can do for ourselves. If I worried all day about 230 and Trump and a potential World War III (the idea of which Trump himself keeps raising), I’d probably be less able to take care of myself, which isn’t good for me or for anyone else in my life.

Speaking as someone who has fought depression in the past: Catastrophizing does no one any good, least of all the person doing it to themselves. These comments sections don’t need it, and although I can’t speak for everyone, trusting by how that bullshit gets flagged on a regular basis, I’m pretty sure people around here don’t want any more of it.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Not to shit on a classic Simpsons moment and all, but that’s kind of my point: You’re not actually making yourself feel better if you’re only trying to make other people feel worse so they’ll join you in a round of self-loathing, misery, despair, and possibly even physical self-harm. Catastrophizing to other people is like cutting your wrist, then holding the knife to someone else’s wrist and asking them to cut themselves.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

The thing is, if social media companies had held Trump to an actual standard back in the early 2010s as he was spewing his racist bile about Obama, and had banned him, we would probably be in a better place than we are right now. Trump actually would not have existed as this political force.

Silicon Valley social media companies can’t wave a magic wand and make all problems disappear. But they can look at people with millions of followers who spread hate and lies and go “We are going to deplatform these high-profile bad actors that are, through their words and actions, having a negative effect on our platform and real life.” and that would have a big effect.

They can wave/could have waved the magic wand that’s labeled “Actually enforce the ToS on popular but incredibly toxic individuals with millions of followers”.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Some good, mostly bad

On the one hand if you manage to offend both russia and the current USG you probably did something right, on the other hand if these demands aren’t a dishonest attempt to kill social media in the country by insuring it’s effectively impossible to operate there then whoever proposed them needs to be removed from their position ASAP as having demonstrated themselves to be too dumb to run a lemonade stand, let alone write laws that have country-wide impacts.

Arianity says:

These limits are obviously unworkable, however:

All rules like this are likely to do is have various apps block Romania entirely. And, perhaps that’s the goal. But it hardly seems like a productive approach.

There’s kind of a catch-22 problem here, isn’t there? The actual capabilities of current technology can’t actually solve the problem. That leaves you with letting some of the damage happen, or chucking it entirely. You can devise different solutions that do a better or worse job to mitigate the damage, but even the best is going to let a nontrivial amount happen.

Given their current situation, I can kind of see why that might not cross the threshold for being good enough.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

If more than 30% of user-reported content is confirmed as illegal, platforms are fined 1% of turnover.

So they want social media platforms to attract more awful-but-legal content and spread that content more widely, in order to encourage additional reporting of legal content and remain below the threshold.

The exact kind of content that is most likely to favor Georgescu, and has already propelled him to broad electoral success.

Why bother overturning the election if they like him so much?

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Tech Industry: We have created a magic wand!

Tech Shills: This magic wand the tech industry has created is going to spread democracy, solve global warming, and bring about peace and love for all mankind!

Romania: The tech industry needs to use its magic wand to limit some of the harm its doing to our democracy

Tech Shills: Romania Proposes Platforms Invent Magic Wand As Content Moderation Solution

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