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UK Wants BBC Content Boosted on TikTok and YouTube

UK Wants BBC Content Boosted on TikTok and YouTube

UK Wants BBC Content Boosted on TikTok and YouTube
Above: **Watermarked Getty Image. Kindly Replace** A phone with ITV, Sky and BBC news apps on Nov. 8, 2025, in Bath, England. Image credit: Anna Barclay/Getty Images

The Spin


Algorithms are quietly burying trusted public interest journalism while misinformation runs wild, and the UK government is right to step in. Requiring social media platforms to make BBC, ITV and Channel 4 content discoverable isn't censorship — it's basic democratic infrastructure, just like must-carry rules on linear TV. Without prominence requirements, platforms will keep letting engagement-bait and disinformation crowd out the regulated, accountable journalism that holds democracy together.

Forcing platforms to algorithmically elevate state-approved broadcasters is a rigged visibility game dressed up as public interest policy. Independent creators, Substack writers and small video channels would be buried beneath legacy outlets that already lost the open contest for audience trust. History shows government media regulation protects incumbent institutions and chills speech — handing bureaucrats the power to pre-select "trusted" winners is exactly the kind of state capture a free press is supposed to prevent.


Metaculus Prediction

There is a 21% chance the UK will have a Conservative Prime Minister on Jan. 1, 2030, according to the Metaculus prediction community.


The Controversies


© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1