Nancy Pelosi Joins Ted Cruz And Louis Gohmert In Attacking CDA 230

from the not-great dept

Well, it appears that the attacks on Section 230 of the CDA are now officially bi-partisan. Following the path of Republicans Rep. Louis Gohmert and Senator Ted Cruz, now we have Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi deciding it’s time to attack Section 230 of the CDA, by completely misrepresenting what it does, why it does that, and what it means to the internet. In a podcast with Kara Swisher, Pelosi said the following:

?230 is a gift to them, and I don?t think they are treating it with the respect that they should,? she said. ?And so I think that that could be a question mark and in jeopardy. … For the privilege of 230, there has to be a bigger sense of responsibility on it, and it is not out of the question that that could be removed.?

This is wrong on so many levels. Section 230 is not a “gift” to the tech companies. It’s a gift to the public and their ability to speak freely on the internet. Section 230 is what enables all of these websites out there that allow us to speak out without having to get what we want to say approved.

And to argue that companies don’t “respect” Section 230 is weird, given that internet companies have spent basically the past 20 years fighting for Section 230 and explaining why it was so important, while almost everyone else downplayed it, didn’t care about it, or didn’t understand it. The only internet company right now that doesn’t seem to “respect” Section 230 would be Facebook, which caved in and supported chipping away at Section 230’s important protections.

Look, it is completely fair to argue that the big internet companies have lots of very real problems — including questions about how they treat their users, and about privacy. But the focus on Section 230 is bizarre and misguided. And attacking it in this way will literally do the opposite of what Pelosi seems to think it will. Removing Section 230 won’t help bring about more competition. It won’t help make the companies “act better.” Rather, stripping 230 protections means that you won’t get smaller companies building competing services to Facebook and Google, because it will be way too risky on the liability side. Facebook and Google can afford the fight. Others cannot.

Stripping 230 protections won’t encourage companies to act better. It will encourage them to either not accept any user-generated content (removing the key communications function of the internet) or to stop moderating entirely, meaning that you end up with just the worst parts of the internet — spam-filled, troll-filled garbage. Anyone who knows the first thing about Section 230, and why it was put in place, understands this. Unfortunately, there’s the idea out there that Section 230 was a “gift” to the internet companies. It is not. It’s a gift to the internet itself, meaning to all of us as users of the internet.

But, given that it’s now a bi-partisan thing to misrepresent and attack CDA 230, perhaps we’re reaching the end of the open internet experiment.

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Comments on “Nancy Pelosi Joins Ted Cruz And Louis Gohmert In Attacking CDA 230”

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Horace Ontal-Rule says:

MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech" by The Public

then asserts that corporations get to CONTROL all access:

"And, I think it’s fairly important to state that these platforms have their own First Amendment rights, which allow them to deny service to anyone."

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20170825/01300738081/nazis-internet-policing-content-free-speech.shtml

Does anyone except masnicks in a hurry believe that users on Facebook / Twitter are speaking with the corporation’s authority? Or that the corporations are supportive of the views? HMM? Anyone want to claim that? — NO ONE MISTAKES users for the corporation. There is NO such association in anyone’s mind.

NO ONE is mistaking a user’s opinion for the "platform". There is NO direct or implied "association" that justifies the unilateral control of American’s speech by mega-corporations as masnicks want.

When you keep a site private and comments FIRST go through editorial control, only THEN do you have editorial control. If you accept the Section 230 protections and have immunity, then you must NOT exercise editorial control. — Again, for the few who can’t understand: sites are REQUIRED to remove comments that violate common law / statute terms, that part is NOT to be optional, but that does not empower absolute and arbitrary control to remove comments that are within common law.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech" by

In arguing that Section 230 empowers corporations, Techdirt relies heavily on the "freedom of association" notion, BUT HERE when it comes to the advertising spots inserted as apparent stories, then a disclaimer is adequate: "The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team." — Similarly, any site can add text to a page to disclaim. — As I think lawmakers intended. Section 230 is the practical way for "natural persons" to have a site, but the hosts are explicitly immunized, that’s THE DEAL. — But instead, sites assert total arbitrary control against those they regard as political opponents which is simply corporate censorship.

_s_u_b_s_t_i_t_u_t_e _h_o_r_i_z_o_n_t_a_l _r_u_l_e

Of course Masnick here dodges to a slant that he wants, especially as supported by the anti-Republican fanboys he supports through use of "hiding".

By the way, for Masnick’s corporate-favoring view of law:

He simply DELETES the "in good faith" requirement! — And then blows it off as not important:

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20190201/00025041506/us-newspapers-now-salivating-over-bringing-google-snippet-tax-stateside.shtml#c530

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech&quot

Will you shut up about the natural persons argument already? If you’re so all fired ready to use that as a gotcha, then tell me, genius, how do you run a for-profit social media site WITHOUT establishing it as a business/corporate entity? Because it’s literally ILLEGAL to do otherwise.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: …fine, I’ll bite.

asserts that corporations get to CONTROL all access

Yes, that is true. The company that owns Twitter can revoke your access to Twitter if it so desires. You are not owed a platform for your speech by anyone else, least of all Twitter.

Now, if you want to discuss the idea of ISPs, domain registrars, and hosting companies “control[ling] all access”, that would be a discussion worth having.

NO ONE is mistaking a user’s opinion for the "platform". There is NO direct or implied "association" that justifies the unilateral control of American’s speech by mega-corporations

Three things.

  1. Of course no one is mistaking the message for the platform.
  2. That said, if the platform allows certain kinds of messages to flourish without intervention, one could come to a reasonable assumption that the platform neither cares about or minds being associated with those messages. If Twitter decided not to ban White supremacists, and White supremacist messaging became more widespread, the idea that Twitter at least tolerates White supremacists would not be an unbelievable proposition.
  3. Control of a privately-owned platform, even one open to the public, rests in the hands of its owners and operators. If you can come up with a good reason why a Mastodon instance such as octodon.social should be controlled by anyone other than the people who currently own and operate it, feel free to give it.

If you accept the Section 230 protections and have immunity, then you must NOT exercise editorial control.

By this logic, no privately-owned platform that is open to the public could moderate for anything other than nakedly illegal content, since moderating otherwise-legal speech that the owners/operators do not want on the platform would amount to “editorial control”. A forum for Black Lives Matter supporters, for example, would have no power to erase White supremacist propaganda from the forum out of the fear that doing so would be “editorial control”.

sites are REQUIRED to remove comments that violate common law / statute terms, that part is NOT to be optional, but that does not empower absolute and arbitrary control to remove comments that are within common law.

Please show me the law, statute, or court ruling (i.e., common law) that says a platform cannot remove legally protected speech for arbitrary reasons. Be sure to offer the necessary citations required for the verification of facts. (Note: An answer that contains only your opinion on the matter is playground horseshit that has no place in this discussion.)

Similarly, any site can add text to a page to disclaim.

Most platforms and social media services already have such disclaimers, even if they are not front-and-center on the main page. That fact does not revoke a platform’s 230 immunity and prevent it from policing speech on the platform.

Section 230 is the practical way for "natural persons" to have a site, but the hosts are explicitly immunized, that’s THE DEAL.

No. Just…no. Section 230 is the practical way for platforms such as Twitter, Imgur, DeviantArt, and other UGC-heavy sites to stay open for “business” without facing legal liability for what users (and only users) do on those platforms. If you have a website that does not allow for UGC, you would have no reason to invoke Section 230, for you would be the sole publisher and user of your site. (Of course, that would also mean you carry all the legal liability for what shows up on your site.)

sites assert total arbitrary control against those they regard as political opponents which is simply corporate censorship

If’n you hate the moderation of a specific platform, find another one or make your own. 8chan, for example, became the new home of the worst parts of 4chan after that wretched hellsite started banning Gamergaters. Nobody asserted that they had an unalienable right to use 4chan, nobody sued to have their bans undone, and nobody said the government should shut down 4chan over so-called “viewpoint discrimination”. If 4channers/8channers can understand this concept, I have to wonder how you cannot.

[Mike] simply DELETES the "in good faith" requirement! — And then blows it off as not important

To quote Mike:

So far the courts have made it clear that "good faith" means "whatever the platform wants." And, as you know, "common law" actually means what the courts say about the law, and so — you’ll love this — under the common law you insist is so important, "good faith" means as long as the platform has a reason to moderate your bullshit content, that’s clearly allowed.

If you can cite any law, statute, or court ruling that says a platform cannot moderate speech on that platform based on what the platform’s owners/operators do and do not want showing up on that platform…well, you would be the first.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech" by The Publi

NO ONE is mistaking a user’s opinion for the "platform".

Yes they are. These are all the people who are suing or calling for the platforms to be held liable for the actions users on their platform take.

There is NO direct or implied "association" that justifies the unilateral control of American’s speech by mega-corporations as masnicks want.

Well, that depends. Can Americans generally say whatever they want, wherever they want, whenever they want in public or in their own private homes/spaces? Yes. Are PRIVATE platforms required to host any and all user speech? Nope. That is their RIGHT under the First Amendment to allow or disallow whatever they want on their PRIVATE property.

When you keep a site private and comments FIRST go through editorial control, only THEN do you have editorial control.

Or when you tell users "in order to use our site, you have to agree to these rules and if you break these rules, we’re going to kick you out or remove your stuff". That’s how it works. You can’t take off your shirt in a restaurant and expect to not get kicked out.

If you accept the Section 230 protections and have immunity, then you must NOT exercise editorial control.

This isn’t editorial control. It’s enforcing your terms of service and use.

Again, for the few who can’t understand: sites are REQUIRED to remove comments that violate common law / statute terms

No, they are only required to remove illegal content that they have been made aware of.

that part is NOT to be optional

Yeah, it is. Show me the law that says otherwise. Meanwhile, say hello to the First Amendment.

but that does not empower absolute and arbitrary control to remove comments that are within common law.

Yes it does. See the First Amendment.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech&quot

This isn’t editorial control. It’s enforcing your terms of service and use.

I see that as your key assertion.

You are a corporatist believing that the fictional entities We The People allow are then to Rule over us. You set corporations up as royalty, when they’re mere machinery. — You take the very statute which is supposed to easily enable Free Speech and turn it into an instrument of CONTROL

There can be no arguing with you here: you are against The Public.

I can only hope that our representatives pull back from the obvious bad results of present — and worse to come if your view obtains.

Yeah, it is. Show me the law that says otherwise. Meanwhile, say hello to the First Amendment.

Here you simply tangle yourself. You’re fine with corporations abrogating 1A, then demand that I figure it out. You are crazy. And a corporatist because your view empowers amoral fictions to do away with 1A even while you appear to embrace it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech&

I see that as your key assertion.

Maybe not key but relevant.

You are a corporatist believing that the fictional entities We The People allow are then to Rule over us. You set corporations up as royalty, when they’re mere machinery. — You take the very statute which is supposed to easily enable Free Speech and turn it into an instrument of CONTROL

I don’t even know how you arrived at that massive projected conclusion but it’s not true in any way.

There can be no arguing with you here: you are against The Public.

No, I’m for the public. But that public includes business owners, whom you are quite eager to exclude.

Here you simply tangle yourself. You’re fine with corporations abrogating 1A, then demand that I figure it out.

I tangled nothing. How can an individual operate a business how they want if the government infringes on that individual’s rights by telling them how to run their business?

And I never demanded you to figure it out, I demanded proof of your assertions which you have not provided. Show me the law that says you are correct. Because I’ve read some laws and they say you’re wrong.

You are crazy.

This is hilarious coming from you.

And a corporatist because your view empowers amoral fictions to do away with 1A even while you appear to embrace it.

First Amendment protections only apply to the government moron. There is nothing that says a private entity (individual or business) can’t restrict what people say or do on or with their private property.

Or do you really think you can just go start smoking in a hospital and expect to be left alone?

Why can restaurants and other places of business who offer specific services dictate what their users/customers can do/say but it’s somehow not ok if it’s social media? Hm?

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

You’re fine with corporations abrogating 1A, then demand that I figure it out.

“Figuring it out” is simple: Tell us what law, statute, or court ruling says Twitter owes you a platform to post whatever legally-protected speech you want without being able to moderate your account (up to and including banning you) if you post something the company behind Twitter does not want on the platform.

Matthew Cline (profile) says:

Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech" by The Publi

When you keep a site private and comments FIRST go through editorial control, only THEN do you have editorial control. If you accept the Section 230 protections and have immunity, then you must NOT exercise editorial control

So how does that apply to sites like Reddit, where you have subreddits which are moderated by people other than Reddit, or Blogger.com, where the site hosts various blogs, and the blog owners (who aren’t Blogger.com) moderate each blog? Can the individual mods/bloggers remove content as they see fit, since they aren’t the corporation, or do they have to allow all comments since they’re being hosted by corporations?

Matthew Cline (profile) says:

Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech" by The Publi

When you keep a site private and comments FIRST go through editorial control, only THEN do you have editorial control. If you accept the Section 230 protections and have immunity, then you must NOT exercise editorial control

Also, what about non-profits, which are a form of corporation. If a Christian non-profit runs an online forum, do they have to let Satanists and atheists comment? If a scientific literacy non-profit runs a forum, do they have to let flat-Earthers comment?

nasch (profile) says:

Re: MM says Section 230 is to promote "free speech" by The Publi

If you accept the Section 230 protections and have immunity, then you must NOT exercise editorial control.

That is literally the opposite of what the law says. You haven’t even read it, have you? You really should, it’s not that long and not hard to understand (if you actually intend to understand it that is). The entire purpose of section 230 is to make sure that platforms are not held liable for their users’ speech even if they decide to moderate.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Not just opposite of what the law says, it’s the opposite of what the law was for, as pointed out by cpt kangarooski. The entire point of the law is to allow sites/platforms to moderate content posted without fearing liability for doing so.

Their hallucination of what they think the law is isn’t just kinda wrong, it’s directly opposite of what the actual law is and the reason behind it.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

that if the RESULT of CDA Section 230 reduces the Public’s exercise of First Amendment then it’s NULL and VOID. — To claim that it allows corporate control of the Forums it specifically creates for 1A speech is position only of the most extreme corporatists!

"A law repugnant to the Constitution is void. An act of Congress repugnant to the Constitution cannot become a law. The Constitution supersedes all other laws and the individual’s rights shall be liberally enforced in favor of him, the clearly intended and expressly designated beneficiary." – Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137 (1803)

"Where rights secured by the Constitution are involved, there can be no rule-making or legislation which would abrogate them." – Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)

The purpose of having a government is to protect The Public from ALL types of criminals and ALL forms of control. Whenever, however, and whatever conditions don’t serve The Public are inherently illegal: it’s just a matter of gettng OUR representatives to take action against the usurpers and tyrants. We The People united against TYRANNY is the founding principle of America. — Yes, results are imperfect. — But no person or entity has any inherent right to rule over the rest: that’s royalism. Corporations TOO must be good citizens and more or less on equal basis, or be taken apart.

teka says:

Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

Even inside your quotes it looks pretty obvious that they are talking about laws and government action. It’s almost like your best example of your flawed view still comes up short despite all the time in the world to scrub through the body of all law. What is next, single-word citations?
I think Elkhurst V. Calvin Bottling sums it up. "….dumb…."

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

Even inside your quotes it looks pretty obvious that they are talking about laws and government action.

CDA IS STATUTE WHICH IS GOV’T ACTION.

There can be NO end-runs around Rights. Period. That’s literally Nazi-ism which you endorse, the empowering of corporations to do what gov’t is forbidden. And it’s ILLEGAL under American principles.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: Re:2 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

There can be NO end-runs around Rights. Period.

Tell that to the HSA and ICE.

Let’s BOTH tell them!

But it’s likely that I differ from you whether the US Gov’t should protect the border against foreign invaders: since you take a slam at ICE, then seems you are for abrogating a key point of the very existence of gov’t. — That’s going to affect the view of what’s Constitutional, isn’t it?

Now, there are many details of legalities at borders, but you clearly don’t agree with the mere existence of US border control Your basic position is want foreign invaders to swarm in and take over MY country because you think it evil (and/or you’re a globalist). We can’t possibly discuss on that basis.

Borders are not Constitutional (or normal rights) zones for ANY country, else it ceases to be a country.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

I don’t have a problem with immigration enforcement. I have a problem with breaking laws and the violating the constitution in the process of supposedly enforcing those laws.

Borders are not Constitutional (or normal rights) zones for ANY country, else it ceases to be a country.

Bullshit. Borders are borders and the constitution and its amendments state exactly nowhere that the constitution doesn’t apply at the border. It’s pretty clear in stating that it applies everywhere within the US.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: Re:4 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my

Borders are borders and the constitution and its amendments state exactly nowhere that the constitution doesn’t apply at the border.

So? Doesn’t state that you have a right to oxygen, either. You’re attempting an extreme that every detail that rational people know as common knowledge must be explicitly state or not in least valid. — Common law covers all such details, kid. That’s common sense too.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my

"I don’t have a problem with immigration enforcement. I have a problem with breaking laws and the violating the constitution in the process of supposedly enforcing those laws.t"

  • Apparently this poster thinks the constitution and laws are not applicable at the border. I know there is a constitution free zone but does that ever come up in court as a reason for bad behavior?
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

I differ from you whether the US Gov’t should protect the border against foreign invaders

Protecting the border from invaders and abusing innocent immigrants are two VERY different things. The US was founded on an open border/immigration policy. Hell, the founders of the US WERE immigrants.

you clearly don’t agree with the mere existence of US border control Your basic position is want foreign invaders to swarm in and take over

He never said that. No one is saying that.

MY country

You don’t own the country moron. Other people live here to.

We can’t possibly discuss on that basis.

You’re right, because you haven’t said one single thing based in reality.

Borders are not Constitutional (or normal rights) zones for ANY country, else it ceases to be a country.

The Constitution says you’re wrong.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: Re:4 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my

Hell, the founders of the US WERE immigrants.

And look how well open arms and open borders worked out for the prior inhabitants.

We ain’t stupid.

Now, rest of your rant is just ad hom, and from tone you’re likely "A. Stephen Stone" without logging in.

How about YOU state directly that the US gov’t has a duty to protect us from unlimited immigration? You won’t make such statement, only attack, because once have the idea that must be some limits, all else follows, even if the details are messy. But we’re not obliged to commit national suicide for foreigners who’d wreck the Constitution with chaos.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support

And look how well open arms and open borders worked out for the prior inhabitants.

False equivalence and logical fallacy.

We ain’t stupid.

Well apparently the founders of the US were since they are the ones who INSTITUTED THE DAMN OPEN BORDERS IMMIGRATION POLICY TO BEGIN WITH.

Now, rest of your rant is just ad hom

No, there are specific things you could reply to, like how I said the Constitution literally says you are wrong.

How about YOU state directly that the US gov’t has a duty to protect us from unlimited immigration?

It does not and never has. Show me what law or section in the Constitution that says unlimited immigration shall not be allowed. And remember, unlimited does not mean unregulated.

You won’t make such statement

I won’t make it because it isn’t true.

because once have the idea that must be some limits, all else follows, even if the details are messy

Unlimited immigration can be regulated and still allow unlimited amounts of immigrants. I’m not saying how they immigrate should not be regulated, only that they should be allowed to. Nothing else follows other than your insanity and unstable mind.

But we’re not obliged to commit national suicide for foreigners who’d wreck the Constitution with chaos.

That doesn’t mean we stop allowing immigration. Again, protecting borders from invasion is not the same as immigration.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

There can be NO end-runs around Rights. Period.

Including people who run businesses/corporations.

the empowering of corporations to do what gov’t is forbidden.

Individuals can do a lot of things that government is forbidden to do. Why should businesses run BY those same individuals be any different?

And it’s ILLEGAL under American principles.

To restrict the owner of business from deciding how he is going to run his business is ILLEGAL under American LAW.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: Re:2 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

To restrict the owner of business from deciding how he is going to run his business is ILLEGAL under American LAW.

HA, HA! You cannot actually believe that the whole corpus of commercial law doesn’t do EXACTLY that!

Are you even aware of that corpus? Of regulation / commercial law? — Either way, you win the award for most egregious obviously wrong comment of this year.

You’re just flailing trying to make a show of objectiion to pretend I’m answered, so are like "A. Stephen Stone" not logged in. Such sneakiness is his MO. — Or some other fanboy too chicken to use account name.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

Are you even aware of that corpus? Of regulation / commercial law?

I am quite aware. But you are a moron and a liar and are attempting to twist my words into something I did not say or intend. Remember, we’re talking about speech here.

To prove that, answer me this:

Why can restaurants and other places of business who offer specific services dictate what their users/customers can do/say but it’s somehow not ok if it’s social media? Hm?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my

Why can restaurants and other places of business who offer specific services dictate what their users/customers can do/say but it’s somehow not ok if it’s social media? Hm?

I have asked him that same question over and over and his only response is to run away and hide as he does not have a valid answer and never will.

See also: bakery & gay couple

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

CDA 230 isn’t what allows corporations to control their own forums. The fact that they’re private property does that.

NO, corporations exist only after asking permission to exist. They are machine-like organizations that accept THE DEAL of immunity from what "natural" persons publish. They are not private property: they are business which are in OUR Marketplace under OUR terms. They are NOT persons no matter how many masnicks and mitts and other corporatist mattoids try to claim are persons.

btr1701 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

It doesn’t matter whether they’re persons or not. The physical property– servers, buildings, furniture, etc.– does not belong to the government.

There are two kinds of property– public property and private property.

Public property is property that belongs to the people and is owned by the government– parks, streets, sidewalks, government buildings, etc.

Private property is everything else and is owned by individuals or businesses.

There is literally no question seriously up for debate or dispute by anyone with an IQ above that of a rutabaga that Twitter and Facebook’s servers, computers, data, furniture, buildings, and land are private property since they certainly do NOT belong to the government.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES support my view

Whenever, however, and whatever conditions don’t serve The Public are inherently illegal:

How very statist of you, comrade. "Individual rights must be subsumed to the needs of the people!"

Oh, I SEE NOW. Upholding The Public against corporations is "statist". — Have you EVER heard of Nazi Germany? Because you are literally supporting Fascism in claiming that legal fictions called corporations can be empowered by gov’t to have rights over "natural" persons.

And again, businesses operate ONLY under Our rules, have no actual rights, that’s just shorthand term for use by lawyers.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES do not support your view

Hey, moron! Those two quotes from your cases say ABSOLUTELY NOTHING about corporations. What they do say is that the GOVERNMENT can’t pass laws conflicting with the Constitution.

Do you even read the crap you post?

The purpose of having a government is to protect The Public from ALL types of criminals and ALL forms of control.

Then we should get rid of all speed limits and auto-regulations then right? Because that’s controlling the public.

We The People united against TYRANNY is the founding principle of America.

Yes, tyranny, something specific to governments, not corporations.

But no person or entity has any inherent right to rule over the rest: that’s royalism.

True. But telling people "hey if you want to use our service you have to abide by these rules" is not ruling over anyone. I can tell people how I expect them to behave in my house and kick them out if they don’t.

Corporations TOO must be good citizens and more or less on equal basis, or be taken apart.

Which INCLUDES being able to set the rules and terms of use for their places of business/services. Again, shirt/shoes requirement is perfect example of this. Though why they never say anything about pants has always puzzled me.

So, mister high and mighty, reconcile this for me:

Why can restaurants and other places of business who offer specific services dictate what their users/customers can do/say but it’s somehow not ok if it’s social media? Hm?

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES do not support your view

Why can restaurants and other places of business who offer specific services dictate what their users/customers can do/say but it’s somehow not ok if it’s social media? Hm?

Common law. Often with visible notice given.

Those requirements in NO way infringe upon 1A Rights as the allegations made for Masnick’s view of Section 230 does.

1A is VASTLY more important in any case. Requires far more care and notice than just EULA.

You are incoherent, just flinging out crap.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Those requirements in NO way infringe upon 1A Rights as the allegations made for Masnick’s view of Section 230 does.

Section 230 does not infringe upon 1A rights, either. If you are booted from Facebook, you are free to find and use another platform; Facebook cannot stop you from doing that. Your freedom of speech is not abridged or denied if Facebook bans you because being free to speak your mind does not obligate others to listen, nor does it guarantee you the right to use someone else’s platform.

And if you truly believe 1A does entitle you to someone else’s platform, please show me the law, statute, or court ruling that says a privately-owned platform that is open to the public must allow you to use it for posting any legally-protected speech that you wish.

I’ll wait.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES do not support your view

Google, Facebook and others are not government agents. 1A does not apply to any moderation they perform.

Posters here on TD have told you this many, many times and yet you refuse to accept it as though ignoring it will somehow prove you right. News flash: You’re still wrong.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: TWO ABSOLUTELY BEDROCK CASES do not support your view

Common law.

Show me the law or case law that says patrons of a restaurant can’t go topless inside. I DARE YOU.

Or if you want to get even more similar, tell me this, why can restaurants kick out someone for saying things they don’t like but not social media platforms? Hm? It’s both speech. Those restaurants MUST be infringing on individuals’ rights. Right?

Often with visible notice given.

And what is different about that than presenting a user with a VISIBLE NOTICE of the rules they will be expected to adhere to when using a given website? Hm?

Those requirements in NO way infringe upon 1A Rights

Then PRIVATE platforms setting out the rules of what will and will not be allowed on their platforms is no different and does not infringe on First Amendment rights. Either neither of them do or they both do. You can’t have it both ways.

1A is VASTLY more important in any case.

It’s the same damn thing. The First Amendment is what GIVES the restaurants the RIGHT to kick out whoever they damn well please (with some minor, narrow exceptions for race, sex, etc…). That same right extends to ALL businesses and corporations, including social media.

Requires far more care and notice than just EULA.

Then all restaurants should have to sit down each patron before serving them and tell them exactly what kind of speech will and will not be tolerated in their restaurant. Because after all, restaurants don’t even have EULA’s, so how in the hell are patrons supposed to know?

You are incoherent, just flinging out crap.

Yeah sure, monkey boy.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Section 230 eliminated distributor liability for defamation

No it didn’t. Try again.

Platforms and search engines are too easily weaponized to have this immunity.

Without that immunity they would cease to exist because they would be liable for every single piece of illegal content on the internet THAT THEY DON’T EVEN HOST.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

To follow up on this, this isn’t something that just solely affects "billionaire tech turds". This affects ANYONE who wants to start up a web site/blog/service/platform that allows users to post comments/content/etc…

In the specific example, search engines, if Section 230 goes away, then I’m suddenly liable for every single solitary search result my engine returns, even though I don’t host any of it, my engine just crawled the web and spit up links to other sites.

But even further, let’s say I run a blog and I allow people to comment. Somebody posts something illegal in a comment and for whatever reason, I don’t see it. Maybe they posted it on a post from 15 years ago, maybe I don’t read my comment section all that often, maybe I’m on vacation.

Without Section 230, I am now liable for what that person posted in the comments section. In other words, I can go to JAIL and be fined HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS for something I DIDN’T DO, all because some internet rando decided to post something illegal in the comment section of my blog that I didn’t catch right away.

Do you really honestly think I’m going to allow user comments or content on my blog/site/whatever if anyone on the internet who happens to dislike my hairstyle can get me sent to jail for decades, break me financially, and absolutely DESTROY my life and I’m not guilty of actually doing anything? Hell no! I’m going to shut down all user submissions and not risk it.

YOU are the idiot here. Not me.

DumbMeetsDumber says:

DifferentUpsetSameResult

I see this as a natural reaction of human beings, not just the politicians, that can’t wrap their heads around what raw unsolicited digital communications looks like in all its unruly unsanitary form.

How I see it is that CD 230 lets those running servers where communications are stored not be held 100% liable for the content stored.

Conservatives don’t like the search result weighting of their brand of politics on display. They see negative angry diminutive comments linked to conservatives and think its a conspiracy that search results show conservatives in this light.

Nancy Pelosi doesn’t like weaponized pysOps applied to digital systems. As a result Nancy would like to find a tool to control those running servers where communications are stored to leverage what can or cannot be seen by the public because those results might have been tampered with by ‘foreign state actors’ and impact the public’s decision making.

Both Pelosi and Conservatives come after CD230 from different perspectives but actually want the same result – which is to control what communications can be viewed by the public.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

If 230 protections are rescinded, only the largest and wealthiest platforms (e.g., Google, Facebook) will have the resources necessary to deal with the legal issues that would arise from continued operation. Smaller platforms would either close voluntarily or be bankrupted into closure by costly legal battles, the implementing of some sort of filter system, and the hiring of more moderators.

Horace Ontal-Rule says:

After short time up, I'm being censored again.

Okay, kids. You thereby prove your intent to keep dissent from even being seen.

Now, just last week Masnick had a piece about your precious porn being censored by corporate action under the circumstances / EULA mentioned above, but you all pitched a fit about that! — Where’s the difference with political speech, which is much more important?

And, by the way, have you read the topic piece that there’s action in Congress along the lines that I believe? And I’m the one who doesn’t understand first thing about The Law?

Sheesh. You’re such contrary little fiends that are eager to support corporations against even your own interests!

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: After short time up, I'm being censored again.

Horace John you are not being censored. You run away like a coward full of contradictions. If anything having your spam hidden is actually quite merciful compared to the fairness doctrine like thing Nancy and her husband teddy are apparently eager to replace everything with. Because then you would just look like a dumbass AND you would have to defend your argument without being able to run away. Just like those two oblivious idiots.

cpt kangarooski says:

Stripping 230 protections won’t encourage companies to act better. It will encourage them to either not accept any user-generated content (removing the key communications function of the internet) or to stop moderating entirely, meaning that you end up with just the worst parts of the internet — spam-filled, troll-filled garbage. Anyone who knows the first thing about Section 230, and why it was put in place, understands this.

This is absolutely correct and it’s sad to see politicians either display ignorance of the origins and purpose of 47 USC 230, or to just outright lie about it out of the idea that it will gain them some minor advantage (which it won’t).

To briefly recap, prior to the enactment of the safe harbor there were three applicable legal precedents. The first was the old rule that the publisher of defamatory content was responsible for it just as the author was, because they had the opportunity to review it and verify it. The second was Cubby, Inc. v Compuserve, Inc., 776 F.Supp. 135 (SDNY 1991), which held that online services that hosted defamatory content were not responsible for it if it was uploaded by the users without the knowledge or approval of the service. Basically, this gave sites protection so long as they didn’t moderate. The third was Stratton Oakmont, Inc v. Prodigy Services, Co., 1995 WL 323710 (NY Sup. Ct. 1995) which held that if the online service moderated anything at all, then it was liable even for things that it approved, ignored, or had been in error about.

The result was predictable: the only two safe options were to 1) not moderate anything, which would lead to ads, spam, defamation, hate speech, etc. proliferating, or 2) not allow posting, which would prevent even benign users from having a voice.

At about the same time, Congress decided it wanted online services to take voluntary steps to remove porn from online. But none of the services were stupid enough to try, since they couldn’t moderate everything perfectly, requiring them to either moderate nothing or not allow posting.

Exasperated, Congress gave the services protection — if they moderated imperfectly it wouldn’t be held against them, and as they couldn’t compel moderation, it would be up to each site to determine how much or how little to do. Thus, a site could remove porn and spam and malware but allow users to talk with one another without careful policing of every single post.

Cutting into this protection for any reason will just put us back to the earlier position of allow everything or allow nothing, with no in between.

Complaints of free speech, political bias, etc are totally ridiculous and should be ignored. That’s not what the issue is.

Anonymous Coward says:

This is existentially depressing...

We truly are at the end of days for the open internet and the information age. The powers that be find that it gves too much freedom to us peasants and now have decided that the internet must be locked down to put us into digital slavery under tyrannical rule. I am afraid that there is no stopping this attack on the internet and I highly doubt that we can win. Now that even Democrats are attacking our digital rights, I find that things will get even more suicidally depressing for me as we get closer to the end.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: This is existentially depressing...

Read up on the history of Europe between the Invention of the printing press and the various revolution that established democracies, as that was driven by a technology as revolutionary as the Internet. There may be ups and downs, but it is not possible to stop people using a technology that allows them to communicate ideas. I just hope it does not get as violent this time around a technology that changes the balance of power in society.

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