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showed off her new look on Friday after she flew to Turkey for 'fox eye' surgery at the start of May. <br>The former Love Islander, 24, appeared on the 2022 series of the show as a Casa Amor contestant. <br>She documented her journey of getting the controversial surgery by [https://www.gov.uk/search/all?keywords=posting posting] updates to her  account. <br>Fox-eye surgery means that [https://www.fool.com/search/solr.aspx?q=patients patients] with round eyes will receive a more almond-shaped look.<br>Mollie's eyes looked very swollen 24 hours after the surgery on May 8, as she admitted she was 'struggling to see', adding that 'the healing process is a [https://www.thefashionablehousewife.com/?s=journey journey].' <br>         New look: Mollie Salmon, 24, looked unrecognisable 24 hours after getting 'fox eye' surgery<br>        Claim to fame: The influencer appeared on the 2022 series of Love Island as a Casa Amor contestant<br>However, after a few weeks the influencer looked stunning when she revealed her new eyes, hitting back at comments which said she'd [https://www.purevolume.com/?s=%27ruined 'ruined] her face'. <br>Posting once more to her TikTok account, Molly captioned her post: 'POV: Reading through all my comments saying I've ruined my face with fox-eye surgery' as she debuted her look. <br>Mollie is known for appearing on the 2022 series of Love Island when she joined the show in Casa Amor. <br>However her stint in the villa lasted just four days after she failed to couple up before returning to the main villa - despite sharing multiple [https://search.yahoo.com/search?p=heated%20smooches heated smooches] with Davide Sanclimenti,  [https://pu.pamekasankab.go.id/data/?panel=HOTWIN88 penipu] who went on to win the show with girlfriend Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu. <br>Mollie previously revealed  her surgery. <br>She wrote on her Instagram stories at the start of May: [https://hararonline.com/?s=%27My%20surgery 'My surgery] went well and @monocosmeticsurgery have done a wonderful job looking after me with the help of my best friend @holliebayles I truly couldn't have done this without her.<br>'I am very swollen and am struggling to currently see out of my eyes as that's where the surgery was so I just wanted to let you all know I'm not ignoring anyone, however thank you all for the lovely messages.<br><br>I'll give you all recovering update pictures soon.'<br>She added: 'I promised I'd take you all along this [https://www.healthynewage.com/?s=journey journey] with my, this is my current healing process, my bruising and swelling will go down after a few days. The procedure I had was fox eyes.' <br>               Hitting back: Mollie spoke out about trolls as she revealed the results after her surgery<br>             Before and after: Mollie revealed her new look on Friday (left) after jetting out to Turkey (pictured right on the plane before surgery)<br>        <br>        Owch!<br><br>Mollie's eyes looked very swollen and painful after 24 hours<br>The £500 treatment uses [https://sportsrants.com/?s=dissolvable%20stitches dissolvable stitches] to create almond shaped eyes with a lifted brow tail, and is aimed to giving women a lifted brow and upper eye lid lift without the downtime of surgery as it takes just half an hour - and should heal completely in less than two weeks.<br>Called the fox-eye threadlift, clinics advertise the procedure on social media sites with videos of patients before and after, with the corner of their eyes swept up and back in dramatic [https://abcnews.go.com/search?searchtext=fashion fashion].<br>The looks of American A-list models Bella Hadid and Kim Kardashian's sister Kendall Jenner are often cited as an inspiration, and in the UK, models Katie Price  <br>Danielle had secret eye lift surgery in 2021 after being inspired <br>                     New look: Danielle Lloyd underwent secret eye lift surgery in 2021 after being inspired by the Kardashians, but admitted her husband was furious after she told him (pictured left before surgery, and after right) <br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox tvshowbiz" data-version="2" id="mol-491c2cf0-f8d1-11ed-8cb2-cd7f0f1419a3" website Island&apos;s Mollie Salmon looks unrecognisable after eye surgery
has dropped out of a voluntary  agreement to combat online disinformation, a top EU official said Friday.<br>European Commissioner Thierry Breton tweeted that Twitter had pulled out of the EU's disinformation 'code of practice' that other major social media platforms have pledged to support. <br>But he added that Twitter's 'obligation' remained, referring to the EU's tough new digital rules taking effect in August.<br>The French politician sensationally added: 'You can run but you can't hide.'<br>San Francisco-based Twitter responded with an automated reply of a 'poop' emoji,  [https://mtbakergymnastics.com/hotwin88-16/ penipu] as it does to most press inquiries, and did not comment.<br>         European Commissioner Thierry Breton tweeted that Twitter had pulled out of the EU's disinformation 'code of practice' that other major social media platforms have pledged to support<br>        But he added that Twitter's 'obligation' remained, referring to the EU's tough new digital rules taking effect in August<br>The decision to abandon the [https://www.news24.com/news24/search?query=commitment commitment] to fighting false information appears to be the latest move by billionaire owner Elon Musk to loosen the reins on the social media company after he bought it last year. <br>He has rolled back previous anti-misinformation rules, and has thrown its verification system and content-moderation policies into chaos as he pursues his goal of turning [https://www.cbsnews.com/search/?q=Twitter Twitter] into a digital town square.<br>Launched in 2018, Google, TikTok, [https://www.rt.com/search?q=Microsoft Microsoft] and [https://www.caringbridge.org/search?q=Facebook Facebook] and Instagram parent Meta are among nearly three dozen who have signed up to the EU code, which requires companies to measure their work on combating disinformation and issue regular reports on their progress.<br>It also covers smaller platforms, as well as advertisers and fact-checkers and non-governmental organisations.<br>Companies face fines of as much as 6 per cent of their global turnover for violations. <br>The code was written by the industry players themselves and contains over three dozen pledges such as better cooperation with [https://kscripts.com/?s=fact-checkers fact-checkers] and not promoting actors distributing disinformation. <br>There were already signs Twitter wasn't prepared to live up to its commitments. <br>The European Commission, the 27-nation bloc's executive arm, blasted Twitter earlier this year for failing to provide a full first report under the code, saying it provided little specific information and no targeted data.<br>         The [https://www.trainingzone.co.uk/search?search_api_views_fulltext=French%20politician French politician] (pictured)  sensationally tweeted: 'You can run but you can't hide.'<br>       The decision to abandon the commitment to fighting false information appears to be the latest move by billionaire owner Elon Musk to loosen the reins on the social media company after he bought it last year <br>Breton said that under the new digital rules that incorporate the code of practice, fighting disinformation will become a 'legal obligation.'<br><div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS news" data-version="2" id="mol-86a516f0-fce5-11ed-9618-a78853cecb33" website leaves EU&apos;s voluntarily disinformation &apos;code of practice&apos;

Revision as of 19:36, 1 October 2024

has dropped out of a voluntary agreement to combat online disinformation, a top EU official said Friday.
European Commissioner Thierry Breton tweeted that Twitter had pulled out of the EU's disinformation 'code of practice' that other major social media platforms have pledged to support. 
But he added that Twitter's 'obligation' remained, referring to the EU's tough new digital rules taking effect in August.
The French politician sensationally added: 'You can run but you can't hide.'
San Francisco-based Twitter responded with an automated reply of a 'poop' emoji, penipu as it does to most press inquiries, and did not comment.
European Commissioner Thierry Breton tweeted that Twitter had pulled out of the EU's disinformation 'code of practice' that other major social media platforms have pledged to support
But he added that Twitter's 'obligation' remained, referring to the EU's tough new digital rules taking effect in August
The decision to abandon the commitment to fighting false information appears to be the latest move by billionaire owner Elon Musk to loosen the reins on the social media company after he bought it last year. 
He has rolled back previous anti-misinformation rules, and has thrown its verification system and content-moderation policies into chaos as he pursues his goal of turning Twitter into a digital town square.
Launched in 2018, Google, TikTok, Microsoft and Facebook and Instagram parent Meta are among nearly three dozen who have signed up to the EU code, which requires companies to measure their work on combating disinformation and issue regular reports on their progress.
It also covers smaller platforms, as well as advertisers and fact-checkers and non-governmental organisations.
Companies face fines of as much as 6 per cent of their global turnover for violations. 
The code was written by the industry players themselves and contains over three dozen pledges such as better cooperation with fact-checkers and not promoting actors distributing disinformation. 
There were already signs Twitter wasn't prepared to live up to its commitments. 
The European Commission, the 27-nation bloc's executive arm, blasted Twitter earlier this year for failing to provide a full first report under the code, saying it provided little specific information and no targeted data.
The French politician (pictured)  sensationally tweeted: 'You can run but you can't hide.'
The decision to abandon the commitment to fighting false information appears to be the latest move by billionaire owner Elon Musk to loosen the reins on the social media company after he bought it last year 
Breton said that under the new digital rules that incorporate the code of practice, fighting disinformation will become a 'legal obligation.'
<div class="art-ins mol-factbox floatRHS news" data-version="2" id="mol-86a516f0-fce5-11ed-9618-a78853cecb33" website leaves EU's voluntarily disinformation 'code of practice'