BERLIN (Reuters) – Twitter has taken legal action against a rule, coming into force in Germany from Tuesday, that obliges social media firms to block or delete criminal content quickly and report particularly serious criminal offences to the police, a German court confirmed on Monday.
The lawsuit filed at the administrative court in Cologne challenges a provision under Germany’s expanded anti-hate speech regulations that Twitter says allows user data to be passed to law enforcement before it is clear any crime has been committed.
Facebook and Alphabet’s Google unit also filed similar lawsuits in the summer.
“We are concerned that the law provides for a significant encroachment on citizens’ fundamental rights,” a Twitter spokesperson said.
“In particular, we are concerned that the obligation to proactively share user data with law enforcement forces private companies into the role of prosecutors by reporting users to law enforcement even when there is no illegal behaviour.”
Germany enacted the anti-hate speech law in early 2018, making online social networks YouTube, Facebook and Twitter responsible for policing and removing toxic content.
The law, which also required social networks to publish regular reports on their compliance, was widely criticised as ineffective, and parliament in May passed legislation to toughen and broaden its application.
The new regulation is intended to help German law enforcement better target right-wing extremism and hate speech online.
(Reporting by Miranda Murray and Matthias Inverardi; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)