Miami Herald

Elon Musk heralds ‘free speech’ for Twitter. He’ll f ind the devil is in the details

- Chicago Tribune

Everyone loves free speech. Especially their own. Elon Musk, the world’s richest human and a prolific Twitter user, proudly calls himself a zealot for “free speech,” which takes on special meaning now that he apparently has sealed a $44 billion deal to purchase Twitter and take the company private. His famous fascinatio­n with the social network’s power is facing mounting questions about what he really has in mind — and how it will square with the social, political and legal realities of a world that already likes to think of Twitter as if it belonged to them — or should.

Issue one: “Free speech” is a virtue with about as many definition­s as people who claim to believe in it.

Many of those on the right who cheer his rise hope he will sweep out liberal bias they discern on such platforms. The left fears he will rescind all restraints on hate speech and unleash harassment, disinforma­tion and impolite tweeters who have been suspended or banished from the site.

Exhibit A is the unofficial former tweeter-in-chief, former President Donald Trump, who has been banned permanentl­y from the network since January 2021.

Musk has been mum about the details of his outlook, except for such intriguing tidbits as this tweet on April 26: “By ‘free speech,’ I simply mean that which matches the law. I am against censorship that goes far beyond the law. If people want less free speech, they will ask government to pass laws to that effect. Therefore, going beyond the law is contrary to the will of the people.”

NOT SO SIMPLE

Ah, if only the matter was that simple. The law as spelled out in the First Amendment bars government, literally Congress, from intruding on free press or free speech. It does not apply to judgments made by a private editor, moderator or publisher.

Censorship by common definition occurs when the government imposes limits on the speech of people under its power. Free speech is your ability to say what you want without worrying about government intrusion except for such harmful and/or criminal examples as libel, slander, hate speech, harassment, intimidati­on or other special cases.

Basically, once ownership is transferre­d to him, Musk is free to say or allow what he wants on the site, until he gets sued.

If he lets Twitter’s content degrade into a digital cesspool that no one wants to use, that would be a bad business developmen­t, not a constituti­onal crisis.

Republican­s and other conservati­ves have charged social networks like Twitter, Facebook and Instagram with bias for taking down tweets, canceling some accounts, and tagging others with warning notices.

Musk hasn’t said whether he will allow Trump’s return, and Trump, who started a social network of his own called TruthSocia­l, has claimed that he doesn’t want to return anyway.

But Musk himself was outspoken on another justifiabl­e bone of GOP contention: Twitter’s limiting, along with Facebook, of the distributi­on of a

New York Post story shortly before the 2020 election that claimed to show “smoking gun” emails about then-Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden.

“Suspending the Twitter account of a major news organizati­on for publishing a truthful story was obviously incredibly inappropri­ate,” Musk tweeted Tuesday evening.

Twitter’s chief executive, Jack Dorsey, apologized for Twitter’s action. The Federal Election

Commission later ruled that Twitter made a valid decision based on commercial, not political reasons.

That did little to soothe the outrage or ease the suspicions of conservati­ves. But the political right has no monopoly on such digital-age discontent­s. Days before Musk’s deal was announced, former President Barack Obama warned that social media are “tilting us in the wrong direction.”

INTERNET REGULATION?

He also talked extensivel­y about how the design and features of technology services can be manipulate­d too easily.

If that sounds to you like a lead-in to a call for more regulation of internet content, you’re right.

“Without some standards, the implicatio­ns of this technology for our elections, for our legal system, for our democracy, for rules of evidence, for our entire social order, are frightenin­g and profound,” Obama said.

What kind of regulation­s does he have in mind? Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham may have given a hint in an April 21 tweet.

In it, she urged the European Union to pass its proposed Digital Services Act to stop the spread of “disinforma­tion” and “extremism” online. The DSA, which will hold search engines and social media networks accountabl­e for policing content on their sites, has been denounced by free speech advocates.

Meanwhile, as much as Europeans may want to tighten controls on internet commerce, some Americans want to roll them back.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, has introduced a bill to abolish Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, the 1996 law that gives more protection from liability to online platforms than old-style media enjoy. Her bill would prevent online platforms from exerting “undue or unreasonab­le preference or advantage to any particular person, class of persons, political or religious group or affiliatio­n, or locality.”

Translatio­n: The bill is aimed to corral online bias against conservati­ves, which, whether Greene realizes it or not, probably would provide consumers with just as much power to sue against perceived bias against liberals.

Welcome aboard and happy sailing, Mr. Musk. We’ll be watching with interest.

 ?? PATRICK PLEUL AP ?? Elon Musk, Tesla CEO and one of the world’s richest human, recently purchased Twitter for $44 billion. What next?
PATRICK PLEUL AP Elon Musk, Tesla CEO and one of the world’s richest human, recently purchased Twitter for $44 billion. What next?

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