Los Angeles Times

CEOs could be subpoenaed over liability for social posts

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A Senate panel is preparing to subpoena the chief executives of Alphabet Inc.’ s Google, Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. if they don’t agree to appear voluntaril­y to testify on a controvers­ial legal shield that benefits social media, a spokespers­on for the Senate Commerce Committee said.

The panel is asking Sundar Pichai, Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey to address Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, which allows the platforms to avoid lawsuits over content that their users post, the spokespers­on said.

The CEOs have been invited to testify at the hearing, which is planned for Oct. 1, said two Senate aides who asked not to be named because the date hadn’t been officially announced. The committee spokespers­on declined to confirm the date.

Google and Twitter didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Facebook declined to comment. Politico reported the panel’s subpoena threat earlier Thursday.

The legal shield is increasing­ly under attack in Washington. The Justice Department unveiled its latest proposal to overhaul the law Wednesday. The Federal Communicat­ions Commission is also considerin­g changes via a rule- making process requested by President Trump in response to Twitter’s fact- checking of some of his posts.

Both Republican­s and Democrats in Congress are seeking their own changes to Section 230, although they have differed on the approach and the goals.

Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Roger Wicker ( R- Miss.) recently sponsored a bill to narrow the companies’ discretion over what content they take down.

Conservati­ves have been seeking to change the law to address what they say is bias by the big tech companies against right- wing views.

Trump met Wednesday with Republican state attorneys general on the alleged bias issues, and the gathering emphasized concerns about Section 230.

The companies have denied they are biased and argue that the provision protects free speech while allowing them to take down the most vile content without fear that they’ll be subject to litigation for doing so.

Pichai and Zuckerberg also recently voluntaril­y testified remotely before a House subcommitt­ee investigat­ing competitio­n in tech. Dorsey has previously testified before Congress.

Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley, another tech critic in the GOP, introduced a motion Thursday to pass his bill that seeks to prohibit companies from receiving Section 230 protection­s unless they update their terms of service to operate in good faith. That bill has no Democratic co- sponsors. Sen. Ron Wyden ( D- Ore.), who helped write Section 230, blocked Hawley’s motion.

 ?? A SENATE Mandel Ngan Associated Press ?? panel wants to hear testimony on a legal shield that benefits social media companies. Above, a House committee’s antitrust hearing is held in July.
A SENATE Mandel Ngan Associated Press panel wants to hear testimony on a legal shield that benefits social media companies. Above, a House committee’s antitrust hearing is held in July.

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