You're asking a good question, but I don't think that there's a general answer.
This requires the use of experts, who will review ethical and moral issues, along with technological and economic concerns in each relevant area. The goal is to establish guidelines to both foster innovation and protect the public. I think that this is generally possible. Of course, several companies have protested that there shouldn't be too many barriers. However, in most cases, I don't believe that the expected results pose an issue.
As we said earlier, there are issues in some situations, but there's no easy solution. We specifically talked about [Technical difficulty—Editor] illegal videos on Facebook. The issue is that we don't yet have the technology to identify these videos quickly enough, even though Facebook is researching ways to improve this type of automatic identification. However, not enough humans are monitoring everything put on the Internet in order to remove things quickly and prevent things from being posted.
The task is practically impossible, and there are only three possible solutions. We can shut everything down, wait until we've developed better technology, or accept that things aren't perfect and that humans carry out the monitoring. In fact, this is already the case right now, when people have the opportunity to click on a button to report unacceptable content.