When Transparency Falls Short: Auditing Platform Moderation During a High-Stakes Election
Benedetta Tessa, Gautam Kishore Shahi, Amaury Trujillo, Stefano Cresci
TLDR
Platforms showed no significant moderation changes during the 2024 EU elections, highlighting transparency and accountability gaps in self-reported data.
Key contributions
- Analyzed 1.58B moderation actions from 8 major EU platforms during the 2024 elections.
- Found no significant changes in platform moderation strategies around the elections.
- Identified persistent transparency and accountability issues with the DSA Database.
- Highlighted limits of self-regulation, urging stronger enforcement and data access.
Why it matters
This paper reveals platforms' moderation didn't adapt during high-stakes elections, despite increased risks, and highlights limits of the DSA Transparency Database for accountability. It underscores the urgent need for stronger enforcement and better data access to protect democratic processes online.
Original Abstract
During major political events, social media platforms encounter increased systemic risks. However, it is still unclear if and how they adjust their moderation practices in response. The Digital Services Act Transparency Database provides-for the first time-an opportunity to systematically examine content moderation at scale, allowing researchers and policymakers to evaluate platforms' compliance and effectiveness, especially at high-stakes times. Here we analyze 1.58 billion self-reported moderation actions by the eight largest social media platforms in Europe over an eight-month period surrounding the 2024 European Parliament elections. We found that platforms did not exhibit meaningful signs of adaptation in moderation strategies as their self-reported enforcement patterns did not change significantly around the elections. This raises questions about whether platforms made any concrete adjustments, or whether the structure of the database may have masked them. On top of that, we reveal that initial concerns regarding platforms' transparency and accountability still persist one year after the launch of the Transparency Database. Our findings highlight the limits of current self-regulatory approaches and point to the need for stronger enforcement and better data access mechanisms to ensure that online platforms meet their responsibilities in protecting the democratic processes.
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