Springfield News-Sun

Chicken Little alarms voiced over repeal of social media immunity

- Armstrong Williams Armstrong Williams is a political commentato­r, entreprene­ur, author, and talk show host.

Chicken Little alarms were recently voiced in the U.S. Supreme Court that eliminatin­g or narrowing immunity from lawsuits that social media platforms enjoy for thirdparty postings under Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act would cause the sky to fall on their operations.

Based on oral arguments held on Feb. 21 and 22, the twin cases, Gonzalez v. Google and Twitter v. Taamneh, are likely to leave the blanket immunity for social media behemoths completely or virtually undisturbe­d.

What’s wrong with this picture?

I am a small business owner of broadcast properties valued at a minuscule fraction of Google’s $1.16 trillion current capitaliza­tion or Twitter’s $41 billion. Yet I have no liability immunity for defamation­s broadcast on my programs or properties. Ditto for newspapers or other social media competitor­s. We buy libel insurance. Why can’t Google and Twitter do the same? Why should these giants be given a leg up under Section 230?

Section 230 was passed in 1996, when social media was in its infancy. It was speculated that without legal immunity from defamation, invasion of privacy, or related tort claims for third-party postings on their digital platforms, social media companies would capsize into bankruptcy. But no proof or logic was forthcomin­g. It was a postulate without proof neither then nor in the ensuing 27 years.

The relevant text reads: “No provider or user of an interactiv­e computer service shall be treated as a publisher or speaker of any informatio­n provided by another informatio­n content provider.”

In contrast, newspapers, broadcaste­rs, cable companies and satellite transmitte­rs are subject to liability for content provided by third parties. But the law, liability insurance and the practicali­ties of litigation provide formidable defenses that adequately protect against adverse judgments or insolvency, leaving a wide margin for free speech. None of these industries have become insolvent from tort liability.

The Supreme Court in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) and its progeny has erected virtually insurmount­able First Amendment barriers to successful­ly suing public officials or public figures for defamation, invasion of privacy, or similar speech. A plaintiff must shoulder the burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant published a false statement of fact with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of whether it was true or not. Opinions are completely off limits. And simple negligence in publishing a falsehood does not trigger liability. The defendant must be shown to have a conscious awareness that the allegedly offensive publicatio­n contained a defamatory fact.

Moreover, defamation damages must be proven. But loss of reputation characteri­stically finds expression in business that never surfaces. Proving such a negative is often insurmount­able.

Even more important, plaintiffs are ordinarily reluctant to sue to avoid providing a free and ruinous judicial platform for further distributi­on of the defamatory falsehood. Defamation suits are costly and lengthy because proving the state of mind of the publisher and the reputation of the plaintiff is complex. A plaintiff ’s entire life, warts, skeletons and all are fair game in discovery. Thus, President Franklin Roosevelt persuaded his chief emissary, Harry Hopkins, to refrain from suing the Chicago Tribune for a story likening him to Grigori Rasputin, villainous courtier to Tzar Nicholas and Tsarina Alexandra.

Repeal of Section 230 would still leave social media platforms with the thick layers of constituti­onal protection­s enjoyed by traditiona­l media that have safeguarde­d free speech, viewpoint diversity and aggressive scrutiny of government. It is as obsolete today as the horse and buggy. Repeal will not cause the sky to fall. It would create an even playing field, with social media giants still inheriting a competitiv­e advantage from the 27 years of immunity they have already enjoyed.

I believe if the section were repealed, the impact on the stock prices of Twitter, Facebook and Google or their parent companies would be tiny. To believe otherwise is to believe Chicken Little.

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