World

BBC tells Twitter to remove ‘state media’ label ASAP

News giant highlights its independence, currently negotiation with platform on matter

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 10 Apr 2023 3:45PM

BBC tells Twitter to remove ‘state media’ label ASAP

MOSCOW – The BBC is currently negotiating with Twitter to resolve the removal of the “government-funded media” label from the social network “as soon as possible”, Sputnik quoted the CNN report. 

BBC’s main Twitter account, which has 2.2 million followers, is currently labelled as “government-funded media,” unlike other BBC Twitter accounts, including BBC News (World) with almost 40 million followers and BBC Breaking News with over 51 million followers. 

According to CNN, Twitter defines state media as media in which the state exercises control over editorial content through financial resources, direct or indirect political pressure, and control over production and distribution. 

“We are speaking to Twitter to resolve this issue as soon as possible. BBC is and always has been, independent. We are funded by the British public through the licence fee,” the BBC told CNN yesterday.

Meanwhile, in March, the UK government allocated £20 million (RM109 million) to BBC as part of the Integrated Review Refresh to support English-language broadcasting and counter disinformation against the backdrop of the 2022 events, particularly the Ukrainian crisis. 

In 2020, the Twitter administration reported that it had begun tagging media pages that it believed were under the control of the authorities, as well as the accounts of the authorities of permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, key government officials, including foreign ministers, ambassadors, official representatives and major diplomatic leaders. 

The Russian Foreign Ministry said that Twitter’s decision to label media outlets from Russia as state-affiliated is a manifestation of double standards and a violation of democratic principles, adding that it considered “politicised and tendentious actions by US IT giants as an attempt to squeeze Russian media content from the international information space, reducing its quotability”. – Bernama, April 10, 2023

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