Malaysia says Facebook, X, TikTok must get licences, NST reports
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From next year, any major messaging and social media service provider operating without a licence from the Malaysian government will face legal action.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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Malaysia has identified eight social media and online messaging platforms that will be required to obtain a licence by next year, even as the government faces resistance to its plans to regulate the industry, the New Straits Times reported.
The platforms include Meta Platforms Inc.’s WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram; Elon Musk’s X; Google’s YouTube; Pavel Durov’s Telegram; Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat; and ByteDance Ltd.’s TikTok, Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil said in an interview with the Malaysian newspaper.
From next year, any major messaging and social media service provider operating without a licence from the government will face legal action.
Some platforms have pushed back,
The platforms had met the threshold of at least eight million users in Malaysia and were not being specifically targeted, Mr Fahmi said. The ministry was currently engaging with the platforms, according to the report.
Given the profits these platforms made and the significance of the Malaysian market, they should comply with local laws, Mr Fahmi was cited as saying. For example, Meta earned about 2.5 billion ringgit (S$753 million) annually from the Malaysian market through advertising, according to the report. BLOOMBERG

