Global Times - Weekend

Trump signs executive order

Move comes in response to Twitter’s fact checking of president’s posts

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US President Donald Trump said he will introduce legislatio­n that may scrap or weaken a law that has protected internet companies, including Twitter and Facebook, in an extraordin­ary attempt to regulate social media platforms where he has been criticized.

The proposed legislatio­n is part of an executive order Trump signed on Thursday afternoon.

Trump wants to “remove or change” a provision of a law known as Section 230 that shields social media companies from liability for content posted by their users.

Trump said US Attorney General William Barr will begin drafting legislatio­n “immediatel­y” to regulate social media companies.

The dispute erupted after Twitter on Tuesday for the first time tagged Trump’s tweets about unsubstant­iated claims of fraud in mail-in voting with a warning prompting readers to fact check the posts.

Separately, a three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals in Washington on Wednesday upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit by a conservati­ve group and right-wing YouTube personalit­y against Google, Facebook, Twitter and Apple accusing them of conspiring to suppress conservati­ve political views.

In an interview with Fox News Channel on Wednesday, Facebook’s Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said censoring a platform would not be the “right reflex” for a government worried about censorship. Fox played a clip of the interview and said it would be aired in full on Thursday.

Facebook left Trump’s post on mail-in ballots on Tuesday untouched.

The American Civil Liberties Union said the First Amendment of the US Constituti­on limits any action Trump could take. Facebook and Google declined comment. Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

“Republican­s feel that Social Media Platforms totally silence conservati­ves voices. We will strongly regulate, or close them down, before we can ever allow this to happen,” Trump said in a pair of additional posts on Twitter on Wednesday.

The president, a heavy user of Twitter with more than 80 million followers, added: “Clean up your act, NOW!!!!”

Republican Trump has an eye on the November election. “Big Tech is doing everything in their very considerab­le power to CENSOR in advance of the 2020 Election,” Trump tweeted on Wednesday night. “If that happens, we no longer have our freedom.”

Strongest threat yet

Trump’s threat is his strongest yet within a broader conservati­ve backlash against Big Tech. Shares of both Twitter and Facebook fell on Wednesday.

Last year the White House circulated drafts of a proposed executive order about anti-conservati­ve bias which never gained traction.

The Internet Associatio­n, which includes Twitter and Facebook among its members, said online platforms do not have a political bias and they offer “more people a chance to be heard than at any point in history.”

Asked during Twitter’s annual meeting on Wednesday why the company decided to affix the label to Trump’s mail-in ballot tweets, General Counsel Sean Edgett said decisions about handling misinforma­tion are made as a group.

“We have a group and committee of folks who take a look at these things and make decisions on what’s getting a lot of visibility and traction,” he said.

In recent years Twitter has tightened its policies amid criticism that its handsoff approach allowed fake accounts and misinforma­tion to thrive.

Tech companies have been accused of anti-competitiv­e practices and violating user privacy. Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon face antitrust probes by federal and state authoritie­s and a US congressio­nal panel.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers, along with the US Justice Department, have been considerin­g changes to Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, a federal law largely exempting online platforms from legal liability for the material their users post.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? An employee works inside the Twitter headquarte­rs in San Francisco, California, US, on Sept 19, 2017.
Photo: VCG An employee works inside the Twitter headquarte­rs in San Francisco, California, US, on Sept 19, 2017.

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