Tuesday, January 31, 2023
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
NEWSLETTER
Google Publishers
  • World
    • Africa
    • China
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • India
    • Middle East
    • United Kingdom
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Diet and Weight Loss
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Relationships
    china us huawei

    China accuses U.S. of wanting ‘technological hegemony’ with reports of Huawei pressure

    52b77afbd2a1e15322e2b82b42d2f10f

    Day 61: Smoky Colors Nail Art

    psyone x400 thumb

    Miracle Mastery – Extreme, *Physical* Psychic Abilities

    6bb3190152ab12e838b109108103e8a0

    Day 62: Flowers, Characters, and More Nail Art

    013123%20QandA%20Chris%20Alban%20Epic%201200

    Cosmos, Epic’s massive EHR analytics platform, helps reduce new mother readmissions

    81315603a9d6774923a97a75278779cc

    Day 64: Mermaid Tail Nail Art

    fitshape x400 thumb

    Forbidden Fitness Secrets Used By Legendary Japanese “Shadow Warriors” Reinforce Your Joints, Ligaments And Tendons With An Almost Supernatural Breaking Point

    46dbdbe8fed2455a8e1ba615373bf78a

    Nail Art Studio: Flamingo Power

    0201 oped dreessen

    Dreessen: Wellington Street — it’s time to think beyond the vehicles

    CLRICX6GJQIG2V6H2MRCTNPP2Y

    Chocolate-covered peanut butter pretzels are best made at home

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
    • food
    • Fashion
    • Diet and Weight Loss
    • Mindfulness
    • Relationships
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Sports

    BoilerUpload – Boilermakers Looking To Boost NFL Draft Stock This Week

    terry bradshaw jalen hurts

    Jalen Hurts Super Bowl Berth Has Alabama, Oklahoma Fans Debating His True School

    Undisputed Early Access Impressions Watch the Throne 3

    Undisputed (Early Access) Impressions – Watch the Throne

    reboot 103 md 05122rt 3

    Johnny Knoxville Says Hulu Axing ‘Reboot’ Is ‘Pretty Unbelievable,’ Hopes Show Finds New Home That ‘Knows How to Properly Support’ It

    The Kings Dilemma

    The King’s Dilemma: Chronicles Ruling Today on Steam

    83d29cb9f369e9d5858ad0e2521af14ae0 cindy

    Cindy Williams of Laverne & Shirley Dead at 75

    BWBeAxrLrBFHHdNreUhfgW 1200 80

    Decipher, decrypt, detect? The four biggest myths of encryption

    college basketball rim

    How to watch Wyoming vs. Fresno State: NCAAB live stream info, TV channel, time, game odds

    gettyimages 74301338

    ‘The soul of L.A.’: 20 years after his death, the stars are aligning for Warren Zevon

    • Celebrities
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Television
  • Sports
  • Business
    • Market
    • Media
    • Perspectives
    • Success
    • Tech
    • Videos
  • Travel
    • Destinations
    • Food & Drinks
    • Stay
  • Style
    • Architecture
    • Arts
    • Beauty
    • Design
    • Luxury
  • Tech
    DHw9brCkWMvEqmjWeQeLUh 1200 80

    Microsoft Defender is getting much better at protecting Linux endpoints

    Mac password

    Forgotten your Mac password? Here’s what to do next

    2021 10 19 image

    This LOL Verifier confirms you really did laugh out loud

    la et ct video game industry union movement

    How ‘crunch’ time and low pay are fueling a union drive among video game workers

    e751c020 a155 11ed bff4 918b2c5d6f11

    The US government is reportedly cracking down harder on exports to Huawei | Engadget

    GettyImages 1273260594

    How to control your smart home without yelling at a dumb voice assistant

    Trending Tags

    • Sillicon Valley
    • Climate Change
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
    • Golden Globes
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Mr. Robot
    • AI World
    • Future
    • Gadget
    • Innovate
    • Innovative Cities
  • World
    • Africa
    • China
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • India
    • Middle East
    • United Kingdom
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Diet and Weight Loss
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Relationships
    china us huawei

    China accuses U.S. of wanting ‘technological hegemony’ with reports of Huawei pressure

    52b77afbd2a1e15322e2b82b42d2f10f

    Day 61: Smoky Colors Nail Art

    psyone x400 thumb

    Miracle Mastery – Extreme, *Physical* Psychic Abilities

    6bb3190152ab12e838b109108103e8a0

    Day 62: Flowers, Characters, and More Nail Art

    013123%20QandA%20Chris%20Alban%20Epic%201200

    Cosmos, Epic’s massive EHR analytics platform, helps reduce new mother readmissions

    81315603a9d6774923a97a75278779cc

    Day 64: Mermaid Tail Nail Art

    fitshape x400 thumb

    Forbidden Fitness Secrets Used By Legendary Japanese “Shadow Warriors” Reinforce Your Joints, Ligaments And Tendons With An Almost Supernatural Breaking Point

    46dbdbe8fed2455a8e1ba615373bf78a

    Nail Art Studio: Flamingo Power

    0201 oped dreessen

    Dreessen: Wellington Street — it’s time to think beyond the vehicles

    CLRICX6GJQIG2V6H2MRCTNPP2Y

    Chocolate-covered peanut butter pretzels are best made at home

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
    • food
    • Fashion
    • Diet and Weight Loss
    • Mindfulness
    • Relationships
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Sports

    BoilerUpload – Boilermakers Looking To Boost NFL Draft Stock This Week

    terry bradshaw jalen hurts

    Jalen Hurts Super Bowl Berth Has Alabama, Oklahoma Fans Debating His True School

    Undisputed Early Access Impressions Watch the Throne 3

    Undisputed (Early Access) Impressions – Watch the Throne

    reboot 103 md 05122rt 3

    Johnny Knoxville Says Hulu Axing ‘Reboot’ Is ‘Pretty Unbelievable,’ Hopes Show Finds New Home That ‘Knows How to Properly Support’ It

    The Kings Dilemma

    The King’s Dilemma: Chronicles Ruling Today on Steam

    83d29cb9f369e9d5858ad0e2521af14ae0 cindy

    Cindy Williams of Laverne & Shirley Dead at 75

    BWBeAxrLrBFHHdNreUhfgW 1200 80

    Decipher, decrypt, detect? The four biggest myths of encryption

    college basketball rim

    How to watch Wyoming vs. Fresno State: NCAAB live stream info, TV channel, time, game odds

    gettyimages 74301338

    ‘The soul of L.A.’: 20 years after his death, the stars are aligning for Warren Zevon

    • Celebrities
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Television
  • Sports
  • Business
    • Market
    • Media
    • Perspectives
    • Success
    • Tech
    • Videos
  • Travel
    • Destinations
    • Food & Drinks
    • Stay
  • Style
    • Architecture
    • Arts
    • Beauty
    • Design
    • Luxury
  • Tech
    DHw9brCkWMvEqmjWeQeLUh 1200 80

    Microsoft Defender is getting much better at protecting Linux endpoints

    Mac password

    Forgotten your Mac password? Here’s what to do next

    2021 10 19 image

    This LOL Verifier confirms you really did laugh out loud

    la et ct video game industry union movement

    How ‘crunch’ time and low pay are fueling a union drive among video game workers

    e751c020 a155 11ed bff4 918b2c5d6f11

    The US government is reportedly cracking down harder on exports to Huawei | Engadget

    GettyImages 1273260594

    How to control your smart home without yelling at a dumb voice assistant

    Trending Tags

    • Sillicon Valley
    • Climate Change
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
    • Golden Globes
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Mr. Robot
    • AI World
    • Future
    • Gadget
    • Innovate
    • Innovative Cities
No Result
View All Result
Google Publishers
No Result
View All Result
Home General

Two Supreme Court Cases That Could Break the Internet

by Google Publishers
January 26, 2023
in General
0
Chotiner%20 %20QA%20with%20Daphne%20Keller%20 %20GettyImages 627161202
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Tumblr

In February, the Supreme Court will hear two cases—Twitter v. Taamneh and Gonzalez v. Google—that could alter how the Internet is regulated, with potentially vast consequences. Both cases concern Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which grants legal immunity to Internet platforms for content posted by users. The plaintiffs in each case argue that platforms have violated federal antiterrorism statutes by allowing content to remain online. (There is a carve-out in Section 230 for content that breaks federal law.) Meanwhile, the Justices are deciding whether to hear two more cases—concerning laws in Texas and in Florida—about whether Internet providers can censor political content that they deem offensive or dangerous. The laws emerged from claims that providers were suppressing conservative voices.

To talk about how these cases could change the Internet, I recently spoke by phone with Daphne Keller, who teaches at Stanford Law School and directs the program on platform regulation at Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center. (Until 2015, she worked as an associate general counsel at Google.) During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, we discussed what Section 230 actually does, different approaches the Court may take in interpreting the law, and why every form of regulation by platforms comes with unintended consequences.

How much should people be prepared for the Supreme Court to substantively change the way the Internet functions?

We should be prepared for the Court to change a lot about how the Internet functions, but I think they could go in so many different directions that it’s very hard to predict the nature of the change, or what anybody should do in anticipation of it.

Until now, Internet platforms could allow users to share speech pretty freely, for better or for worse, and they had immunity from liability for a lot of things that their users said. This is the law colloquially known as Section 230, which is probably the most misunderstood, misreported, and hated law on the Internet. It provides immunity from some kinds of claims for platform liability based on user speech.

These two cases, Taamneh and Gonzalez, could both change that immunity in a number of ways. If you just look at Gonzalez, which is the case that’s squarely about Section 230, the plaintiff is asking for the Court to say that there’s no immunity once a platform has made recommendations and done personalized targeting of content. If the Court felt constrained only to answer the question that was asked, we could be looking at a world where suddenly platforms do face liability for everything that’s in a ranked news feed, for example, on Facebook or Twitter, or for everything that’s recommended on YouTube, which is what the Gonzalez case is about.

If they lost the immunity that they have for those features, we would suddenly find that the most used parts of Internet platforms or places where people actually go and see other users’ speech are suddenly very locked down, or very constrained to only the very safest content. Maybe we would not get things like a #MeToo movement. Maybe we would not get police-shooting videos being really visible and spreading like wildfire, because people are sharing them and they’re appearing in ranked news feeds and as recommendations. We could see a very big change in the kinds of online speech that are available on basically what is the front page of the Internet.

The upside is that there is really terrible, awful, dangerous speech at issue in these cases. The cases are about plaintiffs who had family members killed in ISIS attacks. They are seeking to get that kind of content to disappear from these feeds and recommendations. But a whole lot of other content would also disappear in ways that affect speech rights and would have different impacts on marginalized groups.

So the plaintiffs’ arguments come down to this idea that Internet platforms or social-media companies are not just passively letting people post things. They are packaging them and using algorithms and putting them forward in specific ways. And so they can’t just wash their hands and say they have no responsibility here. Is that accurate?

Yeah, I mean, their argument has changed dramatically even from one brief to the next. It’s a little bit hard to pin it down, but it’s something close to what you just said. Both sets of plaintiffs lost family members in ISIS attacks. Gonzalez went up to the Supreme Court as a question about immunity under Section 230. And the other one, Taamneh, goes up to the Supreme Court as a question along the lines of: If there were not immunity, would the platforms be liable under the underlying law, which is the Antiterrorism Act?

It sounds like you really have some concerns about these companies being liable for anything posted on their sites.

Absolutely. And also about them having liability for anything that is a ranked and amplified or algorithmically shaped part of the platform, because that’s basically everything.

The consequences seem potentially harmful, but, as a theoretical idea, it doesn’t seem crazy to me that these companies should be responsible for what is on their platforms. Do you feel that way, or do you feel that actually it’s too simplistic to say these companies are responsible?

I think it is reasonable to put legal responsibility on companies if it’s something they can do a good job of responding to. If we think that legal responsibility can cause them to accurately identify illegal content and take it down, that’s the moment when putting that responsibility on them makes sense. And there are some situations under U.S. law where we do put that responsibility on platforms, and I think rightly so. For example, for child-sexual-abuse materials, there’s no immunity under federal law or under Section 230 from federal criminal claims. The idea is that this content is so incredibly harmful that we want to put responsibility on platforms. And it’s extremely identifiable. We’re not worried that they are going to accidentally take down a whole bunch of other important speech. Similarly, we as a country choose to prioritize copyright as a harm that the law responds to, but the law puts a bunch of processes in place to try to keep platforms from just willy-nilly taking down anything that is risky, or where someone makes an accusation.

So there are situations where we put the liability on platforms, but there’s no good reason to think that they would do a good job of identifying and removing terrorist content in a situation where the immunity just goes away. I think we would have every reason to expect, in that situation, that a bunch of lawful speech about things like U.S. military intervention in the Middle East, or Syrian immigration policy, would disappear, because platforms would worry that it might create liability. And the speech that disappears would disproportionately come from people who are speaking Arabic or talking about Islam. There’s this very foreseeable set of problems from putting this particular set of legal responsibilities onto platforms, given the capacities that they have right now. Maybe there’s some future world where there’s better technology or better involvement of courts in deciding what comes down, or something such that the worry about the unintended consequences reduces, and then we do want to put the obligations on platforms. But we’re not there now.

How has Europe dealt with these issues? It seems like they are putting pressure on tech companies to be transparent.

Europe recently had the legal situation these plaintiffs are asking for. Europe had one big piece of legislation that governed platform liability, which was enacted in 2000. It’s called the E-Commerce Directive. And it had this very blunt idea that if platforms “know” about illegal content, then they have to take it down in order to preserve immunity. And what they discovered, unsurprisingly, is that the law led to a lot of bad-faith accusations by people trying to silence their competitors or people they disagree with online. It leads to platforms being willing to take down way too much stuff to avoid risk and inconvenience. And so the European lawmakers overhauled that in a law called the Digital Services Act, to get rid of or at least try to get rid of the risks of a system that tells platforms they can make themselves safe by silencing their users.

Tags: free speechInternetlawslegislationSupreme court
Google Publishers

Google Publishers

Related Posts

[PHOTOS] Absence de réseau cellulaire: des ados frôlent la mort et ne peuvent appeler les secours
General

[PHOTOS] Absence de réseau cellulaire: des ados frôlent la mort et ne peuvent appeler les secours

by Google Publishers
January 31, 2023

La mère d’une étudiante, qui a frôlé la mort dans un accident de voiture en fin de semaine dernière avec...

gettyimages 1243202440
General

Mitch Daniels, former Indiana governor, says he’ll skip 2024 Senate run

by Google Publishers
January 31, 2023

Washington — Mitch Daniels, the former Republican governor of Indiana and president of Purdue University, announced Tuesday that he will...

AFP 3386999 scaled e1675180756710

Ukraine on mission to ban Russia from Paris Olympics

January 31, 2023
Next Post
squid game robot mc 230125 1f24a7

Netflix defends filming conditions on 'Squid Game' reality show after claims of injuries

Recommended

RIta hart illinois

Iowa Democrats choose failed congressional candidate to lead state party

1 day ago
3877

Fourscore years and more: greater longevity is a false challenge | Robin McKie

1 week ago

Popular News

  • artworks Ys14lfEKvuhrcJBW s0eTRw

    Ek Husn Ki Devi Se Mujhe Pyar Howa Ta Pashto Mix .Pathan version

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mere Rubaru Tu Hi Tu Song (Male Version) | Jamai Raja | Zee Tv

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Wadih El Cheikh – Ana Aw La Ahad وديع الشيخ – أنا أو لا أحد

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Jab Koi Baat – DJ Chetas | Full MP3 | Ft : Atif Aslam & Shirley Setia | Latest Romantic Songs 2018

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Americano x Heads Will Roll (Dance till you’re dead) TikTok Songs Remix & Mashup by DJP

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Connect with us

Facebook Twitter Youtube RSS

About Us

GOOGLE PUBLISHERS NETWORK is the largest local-to-national digital media organization in the country. Our national flagship brand, sits at the center of the NETWORK, surrounded by hundreds of local media properties reporting on the stories and cultural moments happening across America and in our communities.

Recent News

[PHOTOS] Absence de réseau cellulaire: des ados frôlent la mort et ne peuvent appeler les secours

[PHOTOS] Absence de réseau cellulaire: des ados frôlent la mort et ne peuvent appeler les secours

January 31, 2023
shipping container

Boy ends up 4,000 kms away in another country after playing in shipping container

January 31, 2023
china us huawei

China accuses U.S. of wanting ‘technological hegemony’ with reports of Huawei pressure

January 31, 2023

Site Links

  • About Us
  • Corrections & Clarifications
  • Ethical Principles
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

© 2023 Google Publishers -

No Result
View All Result
  • World
    • Africa
    • China
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • India
    • Middle East
    • United Kingdom
  • Politics
  • Lifestyle
    • food
    • Fashion
    • Diet and Weight Loss
    • Mindfulness
    • Relationships
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrities
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Television
  • Sports
  • Business
    • Market
    • Media
    • Perspectives
    • Success
    • Tech
    • Videos
  • Travel
    • Destinations
    • Food & Drinks
    • Stay
  • Style
    • Architecture
    • Arts
    • Beauty
    • Design
    • Luxury
  • Tech
    • AI World
    • Future
    • Gadget
    • Innovate
    • Innovative Cities

© 2023 Google Publishers -

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In