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Facebook parent company Meta and TikTok decline invite to Oireachtas committee

Twitter did not respond to the invite nor were they contactable by telephone.

FACEBOOK’S PARENT COMPANY Meta and TikTok have both declined invitations to appear before the Oireachtas Media Committee next week.

The committee had planned to hold a session on the social media platform’s future business model plans and long-term vision for the media sector.

In correspondence seen by The Journal, Susan Moss, Head of Public Policy for TikTok said the company “endeavours to be open about our approach to building trust and safety among our Irish and global community”. 

“We would welcome a future opportunity to engage with the committee on TikTok’s approach to data governance and our Trust & Safety operations here in Ireland,” she said. 

However, she noted that TikTok did not make a submission to the public consultation on the Future of Media Commission, and therefore on this particular discussion topic, she must respectfully decline the invitation to appear on 19 April.

“Promoting a positive and safe experience on TikTok is our first priority, and as you may be aware, we gave substantial evidence on the responsibilities of TikTok to its community,” said Moss.

In an email to the committee, Dualta Ó Broin, Head of Public Policy at Meta Ireland, wrote that there is little that Meta would be in a position to share beyond what the committee would already be aware of.

“As a result, having considered the request carefully, I can’t see the benefit to either side of Meta attending this proposed session,” Mr Ó Broin wrote.

“Meta welcomes the opportunity to engage with the Joint Committee, and would be happy to do so where the subject or focus of the proposed discussion is clear and where the Committee is engaging with all relevant stakeholders within the internet ecosystem,” he added.

Twitter not reachable 

Committee members were also informed that Twitter were also invited to the meeting next week however, Twitter have not responded to the invitation. Members were also informed that it has not been possible to make contact with the organisation by phone.

Fianna Fáil TD Malcolm Byrne, who sits on the committee, said in recent weeks the committee has been looking at the future of the media in Ireland.

“We are engaging with a wide range of stakeholders. We have a particular focus on combating misinformation and tackling disinformation and on ways to enhance media literacy. This is to influence government policy and future legislation and regulation. We have been working in an effective cross party manner and the input of the social media platforms on these issues will be useful,” he said.

He told The Journal that it was “disappointing” that the social media platforms had decided not to accept their invitation.

“We will continue to work on these issues. We will, of course, continue to also engage privately with the companies. The rapidly changing technological world in which we live requires informed citizens as well as evidence based debate and respect for truth,” he said.

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    Mute Barra Ó Murchú
    Favourite Barra Ó Murchú
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    Feb 26th 2017, 12:34 PM

    Michael Healy Rae is far cuter than people (around Dublin) give him credit. He knew the media would lap up his ‘send in the army’ jibe, now something might actually be done about it – news articles on other invasive plant species!
    All while the Healy Raes own a local Plant Hire company!

    96
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    Mute The IMF are here
    Favourite The IMF are here
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:01 PM

    Barra, only man power – saws and weed killer – will get rid of the rhododendron. Plant hire won’t be hired – so Healy Rae won’t earn from that one (he does from much else mind you – like getting hedge cutting season extended by 3 months!!).

    46
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    Mute canuckandgo
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    Feb 26th 2017, 5:51 PM

    Bloody hell John! Can’t have prisoners do it, they’ll have no time to sit on their arses, watch the footie and play on their Xbox’s, come on man have some sense!!

    24
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    Mute Steven Hillert
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    Feb 26th 2017, 12:01 PM

    Send in Enda and his crew they destroy everything in sight. Complete devastation!!!!!!

    78
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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:23 PM

    @Steven Hillert:
    The article above this one is about contraceptives.
    See can you get a party political broadcast into that as well.

    22
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    Mute Dara Kilmartin
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    Feb 26th 2017, 12:16 PM

    Rosebay Willowherb is a very useful plant for bees, is it classified as an invasive species? Surprised to see Sycamore on the list as invasive. What is not mentioned is Ragwort, Senecio jacobaea, which is proven to be harmful to livestock and I dont think that there has ever been a prosecution for lack of control under the Noxious Weeds Order, 1937.

    24
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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Feb 26th 2017, 12:29 PM

    @Dara Kilmartin:
    And there never will be a prosecution on the noxious weeds act, because the prosecuting authority, the county councils, are the worst offenders, the sides of country roads.
    Their not going to create a rod to beat themselves with.

    35
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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:50 PM

    @Dara Kilmartin Invasive species are non-native. Both Sycamore and the Rosebay Willowherb were introduced to Ireland. The Ragwort is native.

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    Mute Martin Sinnott
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:24 PM

    Gunnera tinctoria is currently considered invasive on the west coast of Ireland, It is considered to be having a significant impact on Achill Island, where is has spread throughout.

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    Mute Tomred
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    Feb 26th 2017, 4:59 PM

    Would be useful if they had pics rather than Latin names…

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    Mute Mercurial One
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    Feb 26th 2017, 12:02 PM

    Be the Holy man tonight, let’s not hope the Asian Hornet comes to destroy our native bee population

    27
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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:38 PM

    @Mercurial One: There were hornets in the South of England last year I believe… But the U.K. has the Arthurdendyus triangulatus already and they are dangerous…
    http://invasivespeciesireland.com/most-unwanted-species/established/terrestrial/?pg=2

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    Mute Mercurial One
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    Feb 26th 2017, 4:39 PM

    @Alois Irlmaier: Another invasive pest is the Ragondin. Only answer to this nuisance is the pit bull terrier.

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    Mute Niall O Neill
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    Feb 26th 2017, 10:06 PM

    Ragondin ? In French? What’s wrong with Coypu?

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 26th 2017, 11:09 PM

    @Mercurial One: Not here? But the EU wanted to reintroduce the Wolf and the lynx back to Scotland and the farmers were not happy at all.

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    Mute Donal Proctor
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    Feb 26th 2017, 12:13 PM

    Build a wall and send them back whence they came

    18
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    Mute alphanautica
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    Feb 26th 2017, 7:59 PM

    The potato is an invasive species, imported from South America.

    Nearly wiped us out.

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    Mute Peter O'Connor
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    Feb 26th 2017, 5:36 PM

    Here’s an app that one can use to highlight Japanese Knotweed to alert it’s presence to the council and thus help stop the spread (by hedge-cutting or soil removal). http://waterfordcouncil.maps.arcgis.com/apps/CrowdsourceReporter/index.html?appid=9c41e4c2f33e4f1eb2d8ab2c1740ea30

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    Mute John Birch
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    Feb 27th 2017, 12:15 AM

    Ecologist Ryan” rosebay willowherb is a native wildflower and one of the most beautiful. Glyphosphate on the other hand has long term implications for soil and habitat.

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    Mute Goran Kelly
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    Feb 28th 2017, 10:56 AM

    I see in this article no mention of ‘Winter Heliotrope’ (Petasites fragrans). I am an amateur botanist living in Leinster, and as far as I can see ‘Winter Heliotrope’ is by far the biggest threat to the native flora (in the East of Ireland anyway). In the last 10-20 years it has spread enormously, colonizing roadsides, grasslands, woodlands, riversides etc. In the areas it colonizes, it smothers out the other plants, out-competing them below and above ground, and then once established, being a perennial, it is basically there for good, preventing anything else more or less from growing in that area. Inch by inch, yard by yard, it is gobbling up the Irish countryside botanically.

    There must be a national effort to control the spread of this invasive, or the consequences for the irish flora will be severe.

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    Mute Stephen murphy
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    Feb 26th 2017, 6:13 PM

    Send in the Special Branch, do they still exist?

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:31 PM

    Japanese knotweeds makes great pies, jams and wine but it will destroy the place it is in…
    http://www.irishexaminer.com/lifestyle/outdoors/dick-warner/new-species-of-animals-and-plants-probably-wont-destroy-our-ecosystem-304261.html
    “The zebra mussel did not clog up all the inlets to our power stations and water purification plants.
    The American mink did not exterminate all our water-hens and pheasants…. another name for them is Chinese barking deer…

    http://www.thejournal.ie/in-pictures-irelands-most-unwanted-list-of-invasive-species-347768-Feb2012/

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    Mute Alois Irlmaier
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:33 PM
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    Mute Atlantean Irish
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    Feb 26th 2017, 1:48 PM

    A foreign species is taking over from the native species all without one drop of blood being spilled, this is accurately described as invasion. And yet the foreign clams do not directly attack or eat the native ‘clans’, nonetheless, the results of this invasion are the same for how we normally envision an invasion involving bloodletting. It shows there are different types of invasion, all however have the same end-result, the native species loses out and may become extinct.

    To illustrate how a stealth invasion is no different in outcome to an overt invasion is this quote from an article in the Journal.ie relating to an invasive clam species:
    “It can reproduce and spread, and out-compete native species “, “the Asian Clam an “aggressive alien invasive species”

    We know this happens to other native species – the Red Squirrel being out-competed by grey squirrels, and the above native flora being overtaken by Rhododendron. Again not a drop of blood is spilled, no overt immediate perception of a physical struggle, but a long term stealth attack resulting in the very real physical acquisition and domination of territory and resources of that territory by one species over the native species. With the inevitable end-result of the replacement of the native species by the invader species.

    With what other native species does this type of long-term stealth take-over take place?

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