Times Standard (Eureka)

A time of reckoning for social media

- By Drew Liebert

These past four years, and especially this past week, California’s social media platforms have underscore­d how their misuse through hate and conspiracy theories is at the heart of the greatest modern threat to our republic. Now we await the inaugurati­on of our 46th president, nervously wondering if social media platforms, or other secret ones, will continue to be the communicat­ion weapons that will result in continuing violence and destabiliz­ation.

California has always been a place of extraordin­ary contrasts. It has some of the wealthiest enclaves, and some of the poorest. It has some of the greatest diversity, and some of the most segregated neighborho­ods. It is the birthplace of the world’s social media technology revolution and now is ground zero for its reckoning.

We are living in real time with the worrisome question whether the state’s social media companies — Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat and others — will continue to be the organizati­onal weapons used to threaten our democracy.

These past four years, and especially this past week, California’s social media platforms have underscore­d how their misuse through hate and conspiracy theories is at the heart of the greatest modern threat to our republic. Now we await the inaugurati­on of our 46th president, nervously wondering if social media platforms, or other secret ones, will continue to be the communicat­ion weapons that will result in continuing violence and destabiliz­ation.

We are seeing that there are uncanny similariti­es between two very different modern technologi­cal marvels: social media and nuclear power. Both initially offered enormous promise for human improvemen­t. Social media was predicted to connect billions of people to become a much more unified and peaceful planet; nuclear power promised to eliminate greenhouse gases and reverse climate change. The story for both has turned out to be far more complex, and troubling. Nuclear power has the risk of destroying the planet, and now we are witnessing how California‘s

social media platforms have the potential to divide our state and country.

As the home of Silicon Valley, California not only has a unique opportunit­y but a profound responsibi­lity to quickly figure out how best to minimize the risks social media so obviously pose. This will surely be an exceedingl­y difficult task, and we must proceed with great caution, both to protect our cherished speech rights as well as the “golden egg” currently shielding our state from much more economic dislocatio­n wrought by the pandemic.

Because the social media companies are uniquely California­n, as are their leaders and engineers, our state policymake­rs must urgently collaborat­e with the tech community and privacy advocates to prioritize the careful developmen­t of effective new legal guardrails to reduce the risk that those who seek to sew hatred and revolution in this country can continue to do so.

Some may argue that this is a power solely left to the federal government, but this is not the case. So far Congress has set very few limits in the Wild West of our internet ecosystem. Indeed, its principal blueprint has been to protect the social media ecosystem from legal responsibi­lity for incendiary communicat­ions posted on its platforms pursuant to Section 230 of the ironically-entitled Communicat­ions Decency Act.

California, on the other hand, has led the way in the past several years in enacting substantia­l and controvers­ial laws to require meaningful consumer privacy protection­s and develop a meaningful set of consumer digital rights. Their legality has not been challenged. It will thus be a natural continuati­on of the state’s ground-rule setting responsibi­lity to quickly commence work with the state’s tech leaders, some of whom are now increasing­ly acknowledg­ing the great dangers of their technologi­es, and privacy advocates to develop the safest internet environmen­t possible while protecting speech and constituti­onal rights.

The urgency of this effort is irrefutabl­e — not just to ensure the critically important economic viability of our tech sector and its enormous contributi­on to our stressed state coffers, but to do our best to curtail the ability of those who seek to destroy our communitie­s and democracy. It turns out this is the most important “communicat­ions decency act” California can take.

Drew Liebert is an attorney who has worked in senior staff positions in the California Legislatur­e for more than 25 years, as chief counsel to the Assembly Judiciary Committee and chief of staff to the Senate Majority Leader, liebertdre­w@gmail.com.

 ?? ADAM ZYGLIS — THE BUFFALO NEWS, NEW YORK ??
ADAM ZYGLIS — THE BUFFALO NEWS, NEW YORK

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