DU:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100217203708
https://old.reddit.com/r/politics/comments/xqfgua/is_this_the_beginning_of_the_end_of_the_internet/
https://old.reddit.com/r/law/comments/xqo2gs/is_this_the_beginning_of_the_end_of_the_internet/
https://nitter.net/search?f=tweets&q=Is+This+the+Beginning+of+the+End+of+the+Internet%3F
Occasionally, something happens that is so blatantly and obviously misguided that trying to explain it rationally makes you sound ridiculous. Such is the case with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals’s recent ruling in NetChoice v. Paxton. Earlier this month, the court upheld a preposterous Texas law stating that online platforms with more than 50 million monthly active users in the United States no longer have First Amendment rights regarding their editorial decisions. Put another way, the law tells big social-media companies that they can’t moderate the content on their platforms. YouTube purging terrorist-recruitment videos? Illegal. Twitter removing a violent cell of neo-Nazis harassing people with death threats? Sorry, that’s censorship, according to Andy Oldham, a judge of the United States Court of Appeals and the former general counsel to Texas Governor Greg Abbott.
A state compelling social-media companies to host all user content without restrictions isn’t merely, as the First Amendment litigation lawyer Ken White put it on Twitter, “the most angrily incoherent First Amendment decision I think I’ve ever read.” It’s also the type of ruling that threatens to blow up the architecture of the internet. To understand why requires some expertise in First Amendment law and content-moderation policy, and a grounding in what makes the internet a truly transformational technology. So I called up some legal and tech-policy experts and asked them to explain the Fifth Circuit ruling—and its consequences—to me as if I were a precocious 5-year-old with a strange interest in jurisprudence.
Techdirt founder Mike Masnick, who has been writing for decades about the intersection of tech policy and civil liberties, told me that the ruling is “fractally wrong”—made up of so many layers of wrongness that, in order to fully comprehend its significance, “you must understand the historical wrongness before the legal wrongness, before you can get to the technical wrongness.” In theory, the ruling means that any state in the Fifth Circuit (such as Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi) could “mandate that news organizations must cover certain politicians or certain other content” and even implies that “the state can now compel any speech it wants on private property.” The law would allow both the Texas attorney general and private citizens who do business in Texas to bring suit against the platforms if they feel their content was removed because of a specific viewpoint. Daphne Keller, the director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford’s Cyber Policy Center, told me that such a law could amount to “a litigation DDoS [Denial of Service] attack, unleashing a wave of potentially frivolous and serious suits against the platforms.”
To give me a sense of just how sweeping and nonsensical the law could be in practice, Masnick suggested that, under the logic of the ruling, it very well could be illegal to update Wikipedia in Texas, because any user attempt to add to a page could be deemed an act of censorship based on the viewpoint of that user (which the law forbids). The same could be true of chat platforms, including iMessage and Reddit, and perhaps also Groomercord, which is built on tens of thousands of private chat rooms run by private moderators. Enforcement at that scale is nearly impossible. This week, to demonstrate the absurdity of the law and stress test possible Texas enforcement, the subreddit /r/PoliticalHumor mandated that every comment in the forum include the phrase “Greg Abbott is a little piss baby” or be deleted. “We realized what a ripe situation this is, so we’re going to flagrantly break this law,” a moderator of the subreddit wrote. “We like this Constitution thing. Seems like it has some good ideas.”
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
That's not what the law says, it's aimed at the current underhanded methods of manipulating content, such as the site rules only mattering if you're right-leaning.
On top of that, the idea that once you're at 50 million users you're basically a public utility and shouldn't be cutting people off anyway isn't all that unreasonable. It's not like 10 Nazis pose a serious threat to such a site. The reality is that these sites are exploting their position to manipulate politics, and without firm regulation the internet is pretty much already dead. Just look at how heavily astroturfed and manipulated Reddit has become in just a few years.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
removing a post or banning a user isn't underhanded lol
it's just a good idea
in what way is a social media site a public utility
this would just make sites like Reddit even more astroturfed if you can't ban
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
trolling drama users lmao.
you had me for a second there
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
not a troll
banning boring idiots and removing boring and bad posts is an unironically good thing
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
wtf so you keep r-slurredly missing the point by accident?
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
again i didn't miss your point
your point was bad and you should feel bad
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
if you didn't keep missing the point, you would have addressed it by now
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
i did and your point was nonsensical and bad
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
good one
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
Democracycels fear the dictatorshipchad![:gigachad2: :gigachad2:](/e/gigachad2.webp)
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
The idea that you actually have to state the rules in the ToS, rather than arbitrarily removing whatever you fancy, really isn't unreasonable.
Remember that these rules only apply if the site advertises itself as an open public space. If Reddit wants to put "no right wingers" in it's terms, they're free to do that. However, the bottom line is that right now these sites are claiming immunity from any responsibility for their content under the notion that they're a public platform that they exert no editorial control over. You can't have your cake and eat it. If you want common carrier protections you can't pick and choose - you could say the same about phone networks. Fortunately they never started refusing to let people call donation lines for specific parties.
How so? I'm genuinely curious how preventing all the bullshit sub bans would actually have changed this.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
wouldn't a "we can remove anything we see fit for any reason or even no reason at all" like every site already has in their terms of service basically get around that then? it'd make it functionally useless.
see above.
yes you can, that's how the federal law is. that's kinda the point of section 230, and it's really the only way it could reasonably work.
don't know where "sub gets banned = astroturfing" but if you couldn't remove shit, anyone would be able to manipulate their viewpoint or whatever. it'd make astroturfing much more commonplace since no one could moderate it
so it's either a complete nothingburger or completely idiotic. either way, it's dumb
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Definitely, which is why they included a bit about ToS having to actually make clear what is and isn't allowed.
At this point I'm not sure if you're deliberately missing the point here, but I've got better things to do today.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
anything the admins want and nothing the admins don't want
seems pretty clear to me
no i get your point just fine, your point is just pretty stupid
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
I'm 99% sure
@justcool393 is trolling
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context