New BBC chief goes to war on ‘fake news’ and calls for overhaul to take on social media giants

New BBC chief goes to war on ‘fake news’ and calls for overhaul of rules to take on social media giants

  • Richard Sharp, 65, will use speech to join calls for tighter social media regulation
  • The new chairman of the BBC will say ‘urgent questions’ need to be addressed
  • He will also stress impartiality is the ‘first priority’ of BBC board and of Tim Davie
  • Mr Sharp took over from Sir David Clementi in February after working in banking 


The new chairman of the BBC will declare war on ‘fake news’ in his first major speech today, calling for an overhaul of existing regulations to take on the social media giants.

Richard Sharp will say ‘urgent questions’ need to be addressed, as conspiracy theories and lies have been able to flourish in ‘closed media environments’.

He will also deliver a message about the BBC’s impartiality, saying it is ‘something we must prove again every day’.

The chairman took over from Sir David Clementi in February after working in banking and later as an adviser to Chancellor Rishi Sunak.

Richard Sharp (pictured above), 65, will say ‘urgent questions’ need to be addressed, as conspiracy theories and lies have been able to flourish in ‘closed media environments’

Mr Sharp, who took over from Sir David Clementi in February, will also stress impartiality is the ¿first priority¿ of the BBC board and of director-general Tim Davie (pictured above)

Mr Sharp, who took over from Sir David Clementi in February, will also stress impartiality is the ‘first priority’ of the BBC board and of director-general Tim Davie (pictured above)

He will use his speech to the Royal Television Society Cambridge Convention to join calls for tighter regulation of social media – saying the coronavirus pandemic has created the ‘perfect conditions’ for conspiracy theories to ‘boil over into the mainstream’.

These have ‘real-life consequences’, he will say, such as 5G masts being pulled down over conspiracies that the technology is linked to Covid and the vaccine drive being affected by disinformation.

Mr Sharp will call for the 2003 Communications Act to be replaced with new legislation more suited to the modern, fast-changing digital environment.

He is expected to tell the event: ‘There are urgent questions to be answered about the future media world we want to live in. 

‘We need to rethink the regulatory environment in this country – and replace a Communications Act that pre-dates Facebook with one that can deliver on a clear vision.

‘Now is the time to put in place the rights, protections and education that will safeguard not just our media environment, but the stability of our societies and democracies long into the future.’

The chairman will also deliver a message about the BBC¿s impartiality, saying it is ¿something we must prove again every day¿ (file photo)

The chairman will also deliver a message about the BBC’s impartiality, saying it is ‘something we must prove again every day’ (file photo)

Mr Sharp, 65, will also stress impartiality is the ‘first priority’ of the BBC board and of director-general Tim Davie.

He will say: ‘Impartiality is a prerequisite for the existence of the BBC. And it must be seen as a journey, not a destination – something we must prove again every day.’

Getting this right, he will say, would give the BBC the chance to define itself as a ‘pre-eminent purveyor of facts in the disinformation age’.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk