{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/1b7989bb-75d3-43d4-88ab-da99ebc38133/6983c11a0aa7944053e4f557?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Wednesday 4 February -  X A No Show At The Oireachtas as Pressure Grows to Rein In Social Media","description":"<p>X was a notable no-show as executives from major social media platforms faced tough questioning before the Oireachtas Media Committee. The Taoiseach branded X’s decision not to appear as “concerning” and “disrespectful” — but how far is the Government really willing to go in standing up to Big Tech?</p><p>John Lee is joined by Fianna Fáil TD <strong>Seán Fleming</strong>, Sinn Féin TD <strong>Louise O’Reilly</strong>, and <strong>Elaine Burke</strong>, host of the <em>For Tech’s Sake</em> podcast, to debate political accountability, regulation and the power of global platforms.</p><p>The discussion then turns to growing momentum across Europe for an <strong>under-16s social media ban</strong>, as the European Commission warns Spain that new national rules on digital platforms may breach the EU’s Digital Services Act. <strong>Olga Cronin</strong>, Senior Policy Officer with the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, joins the panel.</p><p>Finally, the programme looks to the US, where deep cuts at the Jeff Bezos–owned <em>Washington Post</em> are affecting around a third of its workforce, including hundreds of journalists. Former <em>Washington Post</em> fact-checker and author <strong>Glenn Kessler</strong> reacts to the impact on journalism and media independence.</p>","author_name":"Virgin Media Originals"}