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Malaysia go hard on tech giants

Beginning this year, tech giants operating in Malaysia will be held responsible for any posts that users in that country make that violate the new laws of the country.

The new law, passed by the Malaysian Parliament in December 2024, takes effect from this year. It requires all tech giants, such as X (Twitter), Google, Meta, TikTok, and others, to apply for a social media operating license and take responsibility for all posts on their platforms.

The updated policies, implemented by the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission, are designed to tackle online threats, including scams and cyberbullying. Governments across Asia are taking aim at big tech companies for their accountability over content posted on their platforms.

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According to the new law, those that breach the license could be subject to investigation or supervision.

Bloomberg reported that Tencent’s WeChat and ByteDance’s TikTok have obtained the license already, while Telegram and Meta Platforms have started the process.

Meanwhile, Malaysia’s internet regulator reportedly revealed that Elon Musk’s X and Alphabet’s Google are yet to apply for the license.

X apparently claimed it did not need the license as the amount of users it has in Malaysia does not meet the threshold of eight million, set by the regulator.

Meanwhile, Google issued a statement to the commission stating it had concerns over the classification of YouTube’s video-sharing features under the framework.

Ghana 

In Nigeria, regulators have taken steps to ensure global tech giants register and operate as legal entities in that country so that they could be held accountable for the conduct of users on their platforms.

Ghanaian regulators are, however, yet to take a step at holding big tech accountable for the abuse of their platforms to protect the public. Very little has been done in that direction, not because there have not been incidents of abuses and cyberattacks.

Indeed, as of today, there is no clear law that even recognises social media platforms as legal entities. So, it would appear that anyone on social media in Ghana is there at his or her own risk.

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