Business Standard

Trump vs Twitter

The feud can have implicatio­ns for freedom of speech

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Apublic battle between social media platform Twitter and the user with the highest number of followers, Donald Trump, may perhaps lead to a redefiniti­on of freedom of expression in America, and also affect the right of social media platforms to moderate content. On Wednesday, Twitter factchecke­d Mr Trump when he tweeted to his 80 million-plus followers that mail-order balloting was “substantia­lly fraudulent” and mail-in ballots would lead to a “rigged election”. Twitter placed a fact-check warning under two tweets: “Get the facts about mailin ballots.” These led to a link debunking Mr Trump’s claims as false. (He has himself voted by mail.) Mr Trump responded with a tweetstorm that Twitter was stifling free speech and interferin­g in electoral processes. He followed up with an executive order. This seeks to empower federal regulators to narrow the scope of the key Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act and place limits on the rights of social media platforms to moderate content. The order also threatens to remove US federal advertisin­g on social media.

On its part, Twitter responded by saying Mr Trump violated Twitter’s terms of service (TOS) against “manipulati­ng or interferin­g in elections” by “posting content that may suppress participat­ion or mislead people”. Twitter’s CEO Jack Dorsey said: “We’ll continue to point out incorrect or disputed informatio­n about elections globally.” In addition, Twitter hid a Mr Trump tweet about the Minneapoli­s riots on Friday, with a warning message that it “glorified violence”. Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act allows social media platforms legal immunity from user-created content, treating them as “platforms”, not publishers. It also gives broad latitude to moderate or remove content. The order threatens platforms with losing these rights and protection­s if they discrimina­te against users, or restrict access without giving users a fair hearing, or take other actions violating the stated TOS. The order could, therefore, potentiall­y affect every platform including Twitter, Facebook, Youtube, and Instagram. However, it’s unlikely to pass legal scrutiny, or be ratified by Congress. Legal experts say the order doesn’t pass the test of US constituti­onality, and it requires courts to overturn decades of case-law and precedent. The order would have to pass through Congress. It is guaranteed to be legally challenged, with an industry lobby, the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, saying: “We oppose today’s unconstitu­tional, ill-considered executive order.” The order is thus likely to be thrown out as unconstitu­tional.

However, if Section 230 is amended, it could have peculiar consequenc­es. Platforms which lose protection from being sued for user-generated content may decide to remove everything potentiall­y litigious, ranging from restaurant reviews to political messaging. Alternativ­ely, if platforms cannot moderate or fact-check, one may see waves of hate-speech, fake news, and racism churned out. The US Constituti­on offers strong protection­s for freedom of expression under the First Amendment. It also has strong protection for property rights. The former gives wide latitude for users to express themselves. The latter allows the owner of a platform the right to moderate, or remove, users.

In April, the Washington Post said Mr Trump had made an astounding 18,000 false or misleading statements since he became President. This is over 15 false statements on an average day. But this is the first time he has been fact-checked by Twitter. Quite apart from freedom of expression, and US federal advertisin­g dollars, there’s a lot at stake politicall­y. Twitter and Facebook were integral to Mr Trump’s 2016 Presidenti­al campaign, and he tweets obsessivel­y. Twitter has stopped accepting political advertisin­g. Facebook continues to allow false or misleading statements to be made in paid political ads, while fact-checking other content. As in 2016, the 2020 Trump campaign thrives on misleading and false statements. If platforms respond by doubling down on fact-checking, or hiding his more outrageous tweets, or perhaps even terminatin­g his account, his campaign would be negatively impacted. On the other hand, if Mr Trump successful­ly bullies social media into not fact-checking his statements, he gains. The battle lines are drawn.

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