Newsweek

LEAVE SECTION 230 ALONE

- by Matthew Feeney

In 1996 Congress passed the Communicat­ions Decency Act, which includes Section 230. The law provides interactiv­e computer services with immunity from liability for almost all harms created by third-party users. It has promoted innovation and entreprene­urship, allowing start-ups to experiment with new ideas and products without having to employ a large team of lawyers tasked with policing forums, comment sections and event pages. Unfortunat­ely, this widely misunderst­ood law is under bipartisan attack.

At the core of Section 230 is personal responsibi­lity. The law states that you—not the service you use to share content—are responsibl­e for what you post. There are a few exceptions, but by and large Section 230 leaves the responsibi­lity for online posts with the appropriat­e agent: the user.

The law embraces the freedom of speech and associatio­n. In the United States we are fortunate enough to enjoy a freedom of speech unmatched by any other country. “Hate speech” is not a legal category in the United States, and people have the freedom to express even the worst ideas. We are fortunate to enjoy both a broad freedom of speech and the ability to disassocia­te ourselves from awful but legal content. The fact that speech is legal does not mean it can be forced on an unwilling audience or venue.

Today, many conservati­ves seem intent on underminin­g personal responsibi­lity and the freedom of associatio­n, in large part because of an alleged systemic anti-conservati­ve bias in Silicon Valley. Such bias has become an article of faith in the modern conservati­ve movement— though I have found little evidence

of it. Yes, some conservati­ve content has been taken down in error. But the political Left has its own complaints on that score, indicating that the mistakes of Big Tech are more random and less systemic. But even if Big Tech harbors bias against conservati­ves, proposed reforms to Section 230 would be misguided.

Republican lawmakers have introduced a variety of bills to amend Section 230. None of them would achieve the goal of increasing online conservati­ve speech while passing constituti­onal muster. Take, for example, the Stopping Big Tech Censorship Act, sponsored by Republican Georgia Senator Kelly Loeffler. The bill would restrict Section 230 protection­s to interactiv­e computer services that moderate content in a “viewpoint neutral manner.”

Sen. Loeffler’s bill makes a common mistake that is regularly on display in many Section 230 debates. Critics of Big Tech are keen to put Section 230 in their crosshairs, when the more likely target of their proposals would be the First Amendment itself.

Content moderation is protected by the First Amendment. Congress could not pass a constituti­onal bill requiring a newspaper to print an op-ed written by a Holocaust denier. Even if social media sites could be forced to host all legal speech, would that produce an internet that conservati­ves would welcome? Hardly. Beheading videos, spam, pornograph­y, videos of murders and other atrocities are all protected by the First Amendment. Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and many, many other services have taken the understand­able decision to restrict such legal content. If Section 230’s liability protection­s are made contingent on a “viewpoint neutral” content moderation policy, users can expect an internet that increasing­ly resembles 8chan and Pornhub.

Other Republican proposals would expand the scope of government at the expense of free associatio­n. Missouri Senator Josh Hawley introduced the Ending Support for Internet Censorship Act. The bill would make large platforms’ Section 230 protection­s contingent on certificat­ion of neutrality from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which would require a lack of political bias.

Republican Senators John Kennedy, Lindsey Graham, Roger Wicker, John Thune, John Cornyn and Marsha Blackburn have all written or co-sponsored Section 230 bills in the last year, as have Democratic Senators Brian Schatz, Joe Manchin, Richard Blumenthal and others. Never mind all of the

“This widely misunderst­ood law is under bipartisan attack.”

members of the House of Representa­tives who have also introduced Section 230 bills.

Even if there is political bias in Silicon Valley, Section 230 reform is not a necessary solution. There are alternativ­es to Big Tech. The internet is much larger than Google, Facebook and Twitter.

Parler, Mewe, Mastodon, Gab, Minds, Bitchute, LBRY, the Interplane­tary File System and many others offer users the opportunit­y to connect with each other and share ideas. A handful of these companies, such as Parler, Bitchute and Gab emerged in response to alleged anti-conservati­ve bias. Some of these services use centralize­d content moderation policies akin to those pioneered by Facebook and Twitter, while others embrace decentrali­zed content moderation policies.

Rhetoric that portrays Big Tech as having a strangleho­ld on online speech misreprese­nts the state of affairs and only offers unhelpful hyperbole. Comparing it to the authoritar­ian Chinese government and asserting that Twitter blocking links to a news story constitute­s “election interferen­ce” only detracts from conservati­ve claims. Twitter and Facebook cannot put you in jail or block you from using their competitor­s, and a private company blocking access to content embarrassi­ng to a political figure is only “election interferen­ce” if every instance of TV channels, newspapers and magazines choosing to reject an article or news story is also “election interferen­ce.” If that is the case, the term has lost any useful meaning.

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