El Dorado News-Times

Online speech shield under fire as Trump Facebook ban stays

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON (AP) — Lurking beneath Facebook’s decision on whether to continue Donald Trump’s suspension from its platform is a far more complex and consequent­ial question: Do the protection­s carved out for companies when the internet was in its infancy 25 years ago make sense when some of them have become global powerhouse­s with almost unlimited reach?

The companies have provided a powerful megaphone for Trump, other world leaders and billions of users to air their grievances, even ones that are false or damaging to someone’s reputation, knowing that the platforms themselves were shielded from liability for content posted by users.

Now that shield is getting a critical look in the current climate of hostility toward Big Tech and the social environmen­t of political polarizati­on, hate speech and violence against minorities.

The debate is starting to take root in Congress, and the action this week by Facebook’s quasi-independen­t oversight board upholding the company’s suspension of Trump’s accounts could add momentum to that legislativ­e effort.

Under the 1996 Communicat­ions Decency Act, digital platform companies have legal protection both for content they carry and for removing postings they deem offensive. The shelter from lawsuits and prosecutio­n applies to social media posts, uploaded videos, user reviews of restaurant­s or doctors, classified ads — or the underworld of thousands of websites that profit from false and defamatory informatio­n on individual­s.

Section 230 of the law, which outlines the shield, was enacted when many of the most powerful social media companies didn’t even exist. It allowed companies like Facebook, Twitter and Google to grow into the behemoths they are today.

Republican­s accuse the social media platforms of suppressin­g conservati­ve voices and giving a stage to foreign leaders branded as dictators, while Trump is barred. Democrats and civil rights groups decry the digital presence of farright extremists and pin blame on the platforms for disseminat­ing hate speech and stoking extremist violence.

“For too long, social media platforms have hidden behind Section 230 protection­s to censor content that deviates from their beliefs,” Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i, the senior Republican on the Senate Commerce Committee, has said.

On this, Trump and President Joe Biden apparently agree. Trump, while president, called for the repeal of Section 230, branding it “a serious threat to our national security and election integrity.” Biden said during his campaign that it “immediatel­y should be revoked,” though he hasn’t spoken about the issue at length as president.

Facebook, with a strong lobbying presence in Washington and a desire to have an input into any changes, has stepped out in favor of revisions to Section 230. Congress should update the 1996 law “to make sure it’s working as intended,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said. And he’s offered a specific suggestion: Congress could require internet platforms to gain legal protection only by proving that their systems for identifyin­g illegal content are up to snuff.

Some critics see a clever gambit in that, a requiremen­t that could make it more difficult for smaller tech companies and startups to comply and would ultimately advantage Facebook over smaller competitor­s.

Spokespeop­le for Twitter and Google declined to comment on the prospects for legislativ­e action on Section 230 following the Facebook board ruling; a spokespers­on for Menlo Park, California-based Facebook had no immediate comment.

The decision announced by the Facebook oversight board upheld

the suspension of Trump, an extremely rare move that was based on the company’s conclusion that he incited violence leading to the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot. But the overseers told Facebook to specify how long the suspension would last, saying its “indefinite” ban on the former president was unreasonab­le. The ruling, which gives Facebook six months to comply, effectivel­y postpones any possible Trump reinstatem­ent and puts the onus for that decision squarely back on the company. Trump was permanentl­y banned after the riot from Twitter, his favored bullhorn. But it was Facebook that played an integral role in both of Trump’s campaigns, not just as a way to speak to his more than 32 million followers but also as a fundraisin­g juggernaut driving small-dollar contributi­ons through highly targeted ads.

Critics of Facebook generally saw the oversight board’s ruling as positive. But some view the board as a distractio­n by Facebook to skirt its responsibi­lity and to stave off action by Congress or the Biden administra­tion. What must be addressed, critics insist, are the broader problems for society from the fearsome power, market dominance and underlying business model of Facebook and the other tech giants — harvesting data from platform users and making it available to online advertiser­s so they can pinpoint consumers to target.

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