Fire In A Crowded Newspaper: Misinforming Readers About Free Speech Isn’t Helping

from the that's-not-how-anything-works dept

It seems to be a rather common phenomenon, but various major newspaper opinion columnists love opining on the First Amendment and free speech without ever bothering to, you know, understand them.

Edward Luce, a long-term journalist and commentator, and scion of an aristocratic British family, is currently the “chief US commentator” (what a title!) for the Financial Times. On Friday he published a piece claiming that Elon Musk is a danger to democracy. And that might well be true (or might not). But the column is so full of wrongness that you won’t learn much about it one way or the other.

It is true that the UK government and Elon Musk have been engaged in a stupid battle of words over Elon’s propensity to promote and spread bigoted nonsense that is encouraging violence. As I’ve written elsewhere, this whole approach seems entirely counterproductive and only plays to Musk’s advantage.

But Luce is quite sure the problem is really American free speech laws. Or, at least, as he totally misrepresents them. On top of that, he tries to distinguish Musk pushing his political views via ExTwitter from other billionaires who own media empires pushing their own views, which makes no sense:

The key question is what, if anything, democracies can do to address the danger from Musk. It is one thing having a newspaper proprietor, or the owner of a television station, pushing their biases in their outlets. This has always happened and it is protected speech. Depending on the democracy, there are also laws against concentration of media ownership. Musk has freest legal rein in the US, where the First Amendment protects almost all speech. Moreover, internet publishers are exempt from liability under the notorious Section 230 of the misleadingly named Communications Decency Act. But even in America you cannot falsely shout fire in a crowded theatre.

The difference between X and say the right-leaning GB News in the UK, or whatever platform the far-right radio host Alex Jones is using in America, is that the latter two are siloed channels. X claims to be the public square. In some respects, people are right to point out that “Twitter is not real life”. It isn’t. But when racist thugs falsely learn on X that refugees are child killers then gather to burn down refugee hostels — the site becomes all too real. At critical moments, X has become a key vector for potentially lethal untrue assertions. That its owner would endorse some of them ought to be a matter of public interest.

But, of course, almost everything in these two paragraphs is wrong. Biased newspaper owners used their own publications to push all sorts of false and misleading journalism to shape their own interests for decades. What Musk is doing is honestly no different than what Rupert Murdoch has done, or others like William Randolph Hearst have done. Henry Ford bought a newspaper just to push antisemitic nonsense. It’s just that Musk is dumber, more gullible, and has more sycophantic fans.

Still, more to the point, almost all the claims in the first paragraph are wrong. Using the “fire in a crowded theater” line should disqualify anyone from being taken seriously on any discussion about free speech. There is a pretty short, and pretty well-defined set of classes of speech that are not protected. But, when people are using the “fire in a crowded theater” line, they are almost universally saying “well, because this other speech is not protected, surely it’s fine to add in this other speech I dislike to make it unprotected.

But, in this case, everything else is still wrong. Some of the concern about the speech on ExTwitter is that it’s incitement to violence. And we do have an exception to the First Amendment for incitement to imminent violence. Arguably, some of the comments that have been of most concern may apply there.

Still, the comment about Section 230 is wholly out of place. Elon owns ExTwitter. The company receives no Section 230 protections for Elon’s speech because it’s seen as the company’s speech itself. So Section 230 has literally nothing to do with what Elon is saying. The whole point of Section 230 is that you put the liability on the proper party — the speaker, rather than the platform. But when the speaker and the platform are the same, there can absolutely be liability.

This could have easily been explained to Luce or the FT’s fact checkers or editors, if anyone had bothered to ask an actual expert.

(And we won’t even spend much time on his “misleadingly named” quip, because it also shows a stunning ignorance of the history of Section 230. Section 230 was an entirely separate bill that was added to the blatantly unconstitutional Communications Decency Act in a weird attempt to appease critics of the CDA. The rest of the CDA was found unconstitutional in a case that maybe Luce should have read, leaving just Section 230, which was never actually intended to be a part of the CDA.)

The second paragraph is perhaps slightly less egregious, but still problematic. That Elon likes to declare ExTwitter to be “the public square” has no impact whatsoever on reality. It is not the public square. It is a private shop on one corner of the actual modern public square, which is the wider internet. But so too are the various media properties and nonsense peddlers that Luce is trying to claim are different.

“Racist thugs” can just as easily “falsely learn” racist nonsense in a wide variety of UK newspapers from the Sun, to the Daily Mail, to the Telegraph and beyond. You could just as easily repeat this sentence about the people behind much of the UK tabloid media: “At critical moments, [insert UK tabloid] has become a key vector for potentially lethal untrue assertions. That its owner would endorse some of them ought to be a matter of public interest.”

Yes, Elon is a gullible fool and it’s ridiculous that he is so easily used as a pawn in the disinformation spreading campaigns of those seeking to cause chaos. But it doesn’t help when people like Luce spread disinformation themselves. It certainly does not bring us any closer to think through how society deals with such nonsense.

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Companies: twitter, x

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Comments on “Fire In A Crowded Newspaper: Misinforming Readers About Free Speech Isn’t Helping”

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

Elon Knows He Is A Hateful Person

Yes, Elon is a gullible fool and it’s ridiculous that he is so easily used as a pawn in the disinformation spreading campaigns of those seeking to cause chaos.

He is an out-and-out bigot and he knows it. He’s undoubtedly been presented, multiple times, with the facts on the murder and how it was misinformation. Musk just doesn’t care. He is not a “gullible fool” but rather a willingly hateful person whose words and actions are literally getting people hurt and persecuted, or worse.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

Yeah, people really need to stop giving the rich and powerful passes, whether politician or not.

Elon or his fanatics would tell you that he’s a brilliant genius who’s intelligence outshines the vast unwashed masses, so if he’s saying something or agreeing with someone else saying something he should not get the benefit of the doubt that he’s been duped, it should be assumed that he knows exactly what he’s saying/agreeing with and his action/words judged accordingly.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

I don’t think anyone is giving Musk a pass because he’s rich and powerful. There’s a “I like what Elon’s saying so I accept it” group, a “I don’t like what Elon’s saying and don’t accept it” group, and vast and seldom-acknowledged “who gives a shit about Elon” group. He gets treated the same as any other online blowhard, he just bought himself the world’s biggest bloviating platform to prance around on.

But I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone who (for example) used to think trans rights were good, but then heard Elon bash them and was like “oh I guess since he’s rich I must be wrong”.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Read Ac’s last sentence again:

But I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone who (for example) used to think trans rights were good, but then heard Elon bash them and was like “oh I guess since he’s rich I must be wrong”.

That’s the statement you so clearly missed. What was that you were saying about others’ reading comprehension?

Anonymous Coward says:

Important context which gets ignored is that a far right government was in power until only a month ago.

The fact that there are riots now shows that they’re desperate now that their plans of shipping people off to an African country with a spotty human rights record have been shelved.

Whereas prior, they took it as a given that the vilified out-group would get shipped there (even the conservative prime minister kept delaying it as he knew how impractical it would be).

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

That One Guy (profile) says:

'How do I slam him without also catching my friends in the crossfire...'

It’s amazing how bad someone’s arguments can become when their biases impose huge ‘this is only a problem when it comes to people I don’t like’ limits on what sorts of criticisms they can throw out.

‘I can’t criticize him just for being rich and owning his own platform because that would impact rich people and their platforms that I do agree with, so I have to make it clear that it’s only because it’s him that it’s a problem…’

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

Some of the concern about the speech on ExTwitter is that it’s incitement to violence. And we do have an exception to the First Amendment for incitement to imminent violence.

You added a word, there- “imminent”. Those are two different things.

And it’s an important change, because it’s one that makes most incitement protected.

Arguably, some of the comments that have been of most concern may apply there.

It wouldn’t even come close under current precedent. The definition on imminent is fairly strict. It’s specifically designed not to catch comments like that.

Luce’s article is a dumpster fire, but if we’re gonna dunk on him, we shouldn’t be making mistakes like that.

Drew Wilson (user link) says:

This really shows that the mantra “I like free speech unless its something I disagree with” isn’t exclusive to far right whackjobs. Yet, when people like us point out how this is actually anti-free speech, you end up receiving messages that say something along the lines of “yeah, but this is different!” No, no it’s not. You’re just becoming the very thing that you hate.

This isn’t to say that Musk is completely innocent. I still have no problem with the idea of calling him an idiot or an ass hole (whynotboth.jpg), but to call for a crackdown on free speech altogether because of this is a completely different thing (and completely ridiculous).

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

Matthew M Bennett says:

"encouraging violence"

I mean, what is “encouraging violence” is a rash of incidents like muslim immigrants (many of them illegal, but still allowed to stay) stabbing little girls to death, stabbing on playgrounds, rapes, etc and the general sense that the government and media is trying to cover it up, applying completely different rules to immigrants vs native (white, in particular) populations, all that.

But thank god we have Elon to tell him to fuuuck all the way off.

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Anonymous Coward says:

“It is one thing having a newspaper proprietor, or the owner of a television station, pushing their biases in their outlets. This has always happened and it is protected speech”

Utter blatant manipulative lie. Has not always happened… objectivity is the cornerstone of ethical ‘reporting’

Your committing the sin of attempted falsification of history and historical jounalistic honour.

Predict you get torn a new one on this alone… yet in addition sentense by sentence your a subversive

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Utter blatant manipulative lie. Has not always happened… objectivity is the cornerstone of ethical ‘reporting’

You should learn about the history of so-called “objective” reporting. First of all, it’s a fairly modern creation (post WWII for the most part). Prior to that, journalism was widely known for presenting things through the prism of their politically motivated owners.

Second, most people today recognize that “objective” journalism is silly, and leads to nonsense like the NYTimes trying to “both sides” everything, even when it’s someone telling the truth vs. someone making up shit.

BeerOnTap says:

The European drive to very explicitly censor disfavored narratives on internet platforms is really ramping up. Please, Mr. Masnick, share your thoughts on Chief EU Censor Thierry Breton writing Musk and warning that a live interview with Trump on Ex-Twitter may violate the DSA. Trump say be a buffoon, but he’s a candidate for President of the US and no law that claims to protect plurality can possibly challenge that. Well, unless it is definitively a censorship law. And the new UK Government is talking about reopening the Online Safety Bill to regulate (block) “legal but harmful” speech, clearly targeting political speech. Your thoughts Mr. Masnick?

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