PETALLING JAYA: According to Deputy Communications Minister Teo Nie Ching, MCMC’s study aimed at verifying whether the count of X users in Malaysia falls under eight million is expected to conclude by the third quarter of this year.

According to Bernama, she stated that the operators of X had earlier mentioned they were ineligible for classification under the application services provider category to function within Malaysia due to their local user count falling short of the eight million-user benchmark.

“MCMC is carrying out a survey to ascertain, through our data and analysis, if X has over eight million users,” she stated in the Senate.

Teo mentioned that MCMC was interacting with the platform’s supplier as well as two additional firms, specifically Meta and Google, neither of which have acquired licenses yet.

She addressed an additional query posed by Senator Robert Lau regarding whether the communications ministry had established a timeline for qualified firms to submit their license applications and what measures would be implemented should these entities fail to adhere to this requirement.

Teo mentioned that there isn’t a strict timeline for social media platforms to obtain their licenses, however, MCMC could implement various actions should these companies fail to submit their applications.

According to Section 126 of the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998, which was amended on February 11, service providers could be subject to a maximum fine of RM1 million or imprisonment for up to 10 years. Additionally, they will incur an extra fine of RM100,000 per day for every day the violation persists post-conviction.

“Furthermore, according to Section 243, we have the authority to impose a penalty not greater than 50% of the highest possible fine,” she stated.

In response to an additional query from Senator Tiew Way Keng regarding the ministry’s actions against fraud and related problems on Meta and Google’s platforms, Teo mentioned that up until March 15, a cumulative figure of 46,929 postings was taken down from Facebook. This includes content associated with scams and illegal online betting activities.

The ministry and government will persist in supporting the liberty of expression.

Nevertheless, the difficulty we encounter lies in the enormous volume of explicit material, fraudulent schemes, and illegal betting operations present on platforms like Facebook.

“Therefore, we must implement stronger measures if Meta continues to be uncooperative,” she stated.

Teo mentioned that both the government and MCMC would ask Meta to strengthen advertisement protocols in Malaysia, akin to what has been done in Singapore.

“In Singapore, advertisers must verify their identity before posting ads or boosting content. The question is: why is this stringent screening applied only in Singapore and not globally?

“If they can strengthen their advertisement screening processes in Singapore, why not in Malaysia, Thailand, and other nations as well? It’s an idea worth contemplating,” she stated.