Penticton Herald

Trump launches Twitter war ... with Twitter

- By JAMES MCCARTNE

WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump launched a Twitter war of a different sort Thursday, picking a fight with the online platforms that helped to shape his political career — a feud that, should it escalate, could curtail free speech in the United States and even run afoul of North America’s new trade pact.

Angered by Twitter’s decision to place factcheck flags on two of his recent tweets, Trump signed an executive order Thursday authorizin­g a review of Section 230 of the U.S. Communicat­ions Decency Act, a cornerston­e of the modern-day internet that protects online platforms from being held liable for third-party content on their sites.

“Currently, social media giants like Twitter receive an unpreceden­ted liability shield based on the theory that they’re a neutral platform, which they’re not,” Trump said, with Attorney General Bill Barr standing at his side.

The order, he said, calls for new regulation­s that would strip that protection from any social media outlets “that engage in censoring or any political conduct.”

“That’s a big deal,” Trump said. “They have a shield. They’re not going to have a shield.”

While the move is being billed by the White House as a full-throated defence of America’s precious constituti­onal right to free expression, and dismissed by others as posturing, experts say changes to the law would encourage companies like Twitter, Google and Facebook to simply hit delete rather than defend the rights of those who post contentiou­s statements online.

“Countries that do not have these kinds of provisions find that platforms will often err on the side of removing content,” said Michael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa who specialize­s in online and e-commerce issues.

“That would probably be, at the end of the day, the crucial takeaway here: this is framed as being measures designed to help safeguard free speech, and yet limiting some of these kinds of protection­s would have the effect of doing the opposite.”

Section 230, credited by many as the foundation on which Big Tech is built, has been the subject of heated debate on Capitol Hill in recent years as the 20-year-old vision of the internet as a self-policing free-speech utopia has been sullied by the seedier corners of cyberspace, where hate speech, misogyny and disinforma­tion campaigns flourish.

But congressio­nal concerns about the law depend on which side of the aisle they’re coming from: while Democrats take issue with content that foments hatred and falsehoods, Republican­s complain about efforts to moderate content that they say end up suppressin­g conservati­ve viewpoints.

That’s what Trump contends Twitter was doing when a pair of tweets he sent Tuesday claiming mail-in ballots are vulnerable to election fraud were tagged with links urging followers to “get the facts about mail-in ballots.” The links led readers to a brief note that called the claims “unsubstant­iated,” citing reports by CNN and the Washington Post — two of the president’s most loathed media outlets.

The Communicat­ions Decency Act isn’t the only place where the text of Section 230 appears. It also happens to be part of the digital chapter of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, where it was included to ensure that the protection it provides technology companies in the U.S. is applicable right across North America.

“The extent to which the United States decided that it was going to create new levels of liability for these platforms, counter to or in conflict with what’s found in Section 230 — that might run afoul of their new obligation­s under the USMCA,” Geist said.

Dan Ujczo, a lawyer who specialize­s in CanadaU.S. trade, said while that’s true on paper, the agreement is designed to be a “living document” that its myriad committees, interagenc­y groups and enforcemen­t bodies will be policing carefully during the early stages to ensure any conflicts or contradict­ions can be navigated.

And as always, it’s an open question whether Trump will make good on his threat in the first place, he added.

“These are warning shots and teeing up some kind of negotiatio­n that will happen,” Ujczo said. “I don’t see this as anything that will have a practical effect in the short term.”

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