The Plan To Sunset Section 230 Is About A Rogue Congress Taking The Internet Hostage If It Doesn’t Get Its Way

from the the-beatings-will-continue-until-the-internet-improves dept

If Congress doesn’t get Google and Meta to agree to Section 230 reforms, it’s going to destroy the rest of the open internet, while Google and Meta will be just fine. If that sounds stupidly counterproductive, well, welcome to today’s Congress.

As we were just discussing, the House Energy and Commerce committee is holding a hearing on the possibility of sunsetting Section 230 at the end of next year. This follows an earlier hearing from last month where representatives heard such confusing nonsense about Section 230 that it was actively misrepresenting reality.

But, based on that one terribly misleading hearing, the top Republican (Cathy McMorris Rodgers) and Democrat (Frank Pallone) on the committee created this bill to sunset the law, along with a nearly facts-free op-ed in the Wall Street Journal making a bunch of blatantly false claims about Section 230. In writing about that bill, I complained that it was ridiculous that neither representative could bother to walk down the hall to talk to Senator Wyden, who coauthored Section 230 and could explain to Rodgers and Pallone their many factual errors.

As I said in last week’s Ctrl-Alt-Speech podcast, they were basically holding a gun to the head of the internet and saying that if Google and Facebook didn’t come up with a deal to appease Congress, Congress would shoot the internet dead.

Now, Wyden and his Section 230 co-author, former Rep. Chris Cox, have penned their own WSJ op-ed that basically makes the same point, with the brilliant title: Buy This Legislation or We’ll Kill the Internet. Because that’s exactly what this “sunset” bill is about. It’s demanding that “big tech” (Meta and Google) come up with a plan to appease Congress, or Congress will effectively kill the internet, by making it nearly impossible for smaller sites to exist.

Just one of the many nonsensical points of this plan is why Rodgers and Pallone think that Meta and Google’s interests are aligned with the wider internet, its users, and smaller sites. There are tons of other sites on the internet that would be way more damaged by removing Section 230.

But Cox and Wyden are pretty clear in pointing out just how wrong all this is. They highlight this trope of threatening to kill something if someone doesn’t get their way:

A 1973 National Lampoon cover featured a dog with a gun to its head. The headline: “If You Don’t Buy This Magazine, We’ll Kill This Dog.” The image is reminiscent of how Congress approaches its most serious responsibilities

This is tragically true. It’s how Congress has handled the debt ceiling for many years now. It’s how Congress has dealt with reform (or, really, lack thereof) of our deeply flawed surveillance system. But, it’s extra ridiculous to have it happen here.

The latest such exercise will be on display at a House hearing on Wednesday, where members of both parties will threaten to repeal the clear-cut legal rules that for decades have governed millions of websites. The dog with a gun to its head is every American who uses the internet.

The law in question is Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act. The statute provides that the person who creates content online is legally responsible for it and that websites aren’t liable for efforts to moderate their platforms to make them more welcoming, useful or interesting.

Or, as Prof. Eric Goldman (taking inspiration from the opening paragraph in the Wyden/Cox op-ed) made in meme form:

National Lampoon cover of a hand holding a gun pointed at a dog. The title has been changed to read: "If you Don't Amend 230 in Unspecified Ways, We'll Kill This Internet."

As Cox and Wyden make clear, the framework of Section 230 is entirely sensible, but only if you actually bother to read it and understand it:

When we introduced this legislation in 1995, when both of us served in the House, two things convinced our colleagues to endorse it almost unanimously.

The first was that the internet was different from traditional publishing. The equation had been flipped. We weren’t dealing with millions of people watching a television network’s production, or subscribers reading a newspaper. Publishing and broadcasting tools were suddenly free or nearly so, offering a microphone to millions of Americans who wouldn’t have the power, clout or fame to be featured on NBC’s “Meet the Press” or in Time magazine.

The second was that without new legislation, the law perversely penalized content moderation. Under the old rules of publisher liability, only an “anything goes” approach would protect a website from legal responsibility for user-created content. Prohibiting bullying, swearing, harassment, and threats of violence could be legally disastrous for any site. It was clear, then as now, that if the law were to encourage such a hands-off approach, the internet would turn into a cesspool.

It’s important to remember this history when evaluating the merits of sunsetting Section 230,as the House proposal intends. According to the bill’s text, if Congress can’t agree on a successor to Section 230 by Dec. 31, 2025, websites from Yahoo and Etsy to the local restaurant hosting customer reviews will become liable for every syllable posted on the site by a user or troll. A single post can generate claims that run into the millions of dollars.

I might challenge the wording in that last paragraph a little bit (though I understand why it was written that way within the confines of a short op-ed). Without Section 230, sites don’t automatically become fully liable for content posted by users (some people assume this, incorrectly). Rather, their liability becomes an open question, subject to the results of litigation that is extremely costly whether or not it is later determined that the underlying post can reasonably generate a claim.

This is the part that often gets lost in this discussion. Without Section 230, it flings open the court doors for all sorts of vexatious litigation that is extraordinarily costly just to even determine if a site is liable in the first place. And when that happens, there is tremendous pressure on websites to do a few things. First is to simply remove any content that is at risk of a lawsuit (or when threatened by a lawsuit) just to avoid the costly legal fight that might ensue. So the removal of 230 gives people a kind of litigator’s veto: threaten a lawsuit and there’s a good chance the content gets removed.

The other thing is, if a site does get sued, the cost of defending the lawsuit becomes so high that many companies (and law firms and insurance companies) will push them to just settle. The cost of settling for a nuisance fee will often be significantly cheaper than fighting the full litigation, even if the website would have a high likelihood of winning in the end.

The problem without Section 230 is not the actual fear of liability. A lot of it is the cost of proving you shouldn’t be liable, which is orders of magnitude higher without Section 230. But this is also a big part of what critics of Section 230 do not understand (or, if they’re plaintiffs’ lawyers, they want that lever to use against websites).

As Wyden and Cox make clear:

Reverting to this pre-Section 230 status quo would dramatically alter, and imperil, the online world. Most platforms don’t charge users for access to their sites. In the brave new world of unlimited liability, will a website decide that carrying user-created content free of charge isn’t worth the risk? If so, the era of consumer freedom to both publish and view web content will come to a screeching halt.

It is very much a question of “if you don’t alter 230 in a way Congress likes, Congress will shoot the internet.”

It’s ridiculous that we’ve gotten to this point, and that the support for this destruction is effectively bipartisan. The underlying framing of this effort as the false belief that the biggest of the big tech companies, Google and Meta, are the only real stakeholders here is equally ridiculous.

As I’ve said over and over again, that’s not the case. Both of those companies have buildings full of lawyers. They, above anyone else, can shoulder the costs of these lawsuits. It’s all the other sites that cannot and will not.

At a time when it’s clear that Google and Meta are effectively fine with putting the open web into managed decline and building up their own walled gardens, removing Section 230 will accelerate that process. It will give the biggest internet companies that much more power, while harming everyone else, with it being felt most keenly by the end users who rely on other sites and services beyond Google and Meta.

So the metaphor here really seems to be Congress pointing a gun at the open internet and threatening to shoot it if Google and Meta (which do not represent the open internet) don’t dance to Congress’ tune. The whole situation is truly messed up.

Filed Under: , , , , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “The Plan To Sunset Section 230 Is About A Rogue Congress Taking The Internet Hostage If It Doesn’t Get Its Way”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
38 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Again:
I think, they’re pulling a Batman gambit, mainly cause they’re using minorities & small websites as pawns, because if what Leif K-Brooks said is true: “and while some of them are much larger companies with much greater resources, “they all have their breaking point somewhere.

Then it may mean they’re relying on acceptable collateral damage.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

In the same way that nuking an entire town in an attempt to get that one buried and hardened but ant infested bunker makes sense, sure.

Again in turn: The two companies that will weather the repeal of 230 the best are Google and Meta, and they will come out ahead because all their competition both current and potential future will be dead.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

The two companies that will weather the repeal of 230 the best are Google and Meta, and they will come out ahead because all their competition both current and potential future will be dead.

Yet you forget, the politicians will not effing care and actually continue to give the two you mentioned lawsuits cause in the end, they see the small sites as acceptable casualties.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

It’s all about narrative control and a war on free speech, which the government has pretty much won already. Look at the origins of Covid. Either it emerged naturally, or it came from a lab whose usual and ordinary business was the creation of unique coronaviruses. (Hint, the likelihood of these two possibilities wasn’t remotely equal).

The government, using the SEC and antitrust tools persuaded entities like Facebook and Twitter to censor content in exchange for not creating a hostile business environment.

Independent web sites threaten narrative control. “An uninhibited marketplace of ideas in which truth will prevail” is the last thing that the US wants. There is no more stark example of this than the government curtailing discussions among Americans why it happened that a pathogen was killing hundreds of thousands of Americans.

Strawb (profile) says:

Re:

The government, using the SEC and antitrust tools persuaded entities like Facebook and Twitter to censor content in exchange for not creating a hostile business environment.

And I’m sure you have a source that it was the government all along, right? After all, there’s no way that Facebook would want to curtail boneheaded conspiracy theories and dangerous misinformation all on their own.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

There were plenty of discussions about covid, including the wildest conspiracy theories. What was “censored” was typically reckless, intentional, or profitable misinformation that was literally getting people sick and often killed, and that was done by companies with the the 1st Amendment right to do so. You can still find a bunch of articles speculating about the possible origin of the virus and thousands of discussions that were had in various forums. The loudest voices bitching about censorship were trying to profit off of useless or deadly “cures” or trying to sell a conspiracy theory.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

Haven’t watched it and don’t plan on ever doing so for the same reason as you but I expect that it was just like every other similar ‘hearing’:

-If any actual experts were called in they were shut down before they could make their points and/or asked loaded and dishonest questions. ‘Has Section 230 stopped beating your wife, yes or no?!

-The only ‘experts’ that were invited and allowed to talk were anything but, and went on long, entirely fact-free screeds about how terrible 230 is and how society itself depends upon it’s removal.

-The politicians involved repeatedly lied about the law, what it says, what it does, and how it has been interpreted in court so further demonize it and provide soundbites of them ‘sticking it to Big Tech’.

The above may not be entirely accurate but I suspect it’s close enough to what actually happened in the overall sense.

Anonymous Coward says:

So interesting bit of irony here: at the time of this writing duckduckgo (on the systems I tested) returns no results for any searchs (sort excepting techdirt, which has an explicit link to techdirts main page, and a wikipedia link). I tried searching for stuff like “gmail”, “linux”, “techdirt”, “google”.

Anyhow, not sure what happened this time, but I wouldn’t be too surprised if it was a giant DMCA.

Would be nice if we could put a damper on laws/regulation that are abused to cripple common internet tools.

Katherine Kern (user link) says:

Who cares what Google and Meta think.

The problem is this committee’s starting premise -“If Congress doesn’t get Google and Meta to agree to Section 230 reforms”.

Google and Meta have lost their chance to have a seat at the table. They have proven to be not in good faith. They have been allowed to operate as public companies when the founders have controlling voting stock and rubber stamp boards which recommend against voting for shareholder proposals to make the company accountable.

The intent of the FCC was to regulate broadcast media because legislators witnessed how powerful reaching everyone in real time could be in 1934. Because of liability and restrictions on ownership, broadcast companies (and all other media which wanted to compete against them) were compelled to protect their credibility. The benefit to the public is that you knew the difference between something you heard on legitimate news media and something you read in the National Enquirer. Today, we have no idea whom to believe because legislators decided to make the rules different. A mistake. Congress should correct this grave mistake now before AI doesn’t just automate coding based on the past, but controls it.

Instead of appreciating this nearly 30 year field day, Google and Meta should listen to their shareholders’ proposals, and even do more, to invest their assets in a product that benefits their customers, instead of risking exploiting them.

The legislators number one priority is the public interest – why don’t they choose to stay in in their lane and do what they are supposed to do.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get all our posts in your inbox with the Techdirt Daily Newsletter!

We don’t spam. Read our privacy policy for more info.

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...