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Let's Not Emulate the British With Limits On Internet Free Speech

kirk-arner
kirk-arner
Former Legal Fellow, Center for the Economics of the Internet

After years of back and forth negotiations and multiple elections, the United Kingdom finally left the European Union last month. On the eve of Brexit, Prime Minister Boris Johnson

This is the moment when the dawn breaks and the curtain goes up on a new act in our great national drama. And yes, it is partly about using these new powers鈥攖his recaptured sovereignty鈥攖o deliver the changes people voted for.

Yet, as the saying goes, the more things change, the more they stay the same. Recently, the U.K. government it was putting its telecoms regulator, Ofcom, in charge of policing so-called 鈥渉armful鈥� online speech to 鈥渕ake the [I]nternet a safer place.鈥� To achieve this, the government wants Ofcom to enforce a 鈥渄uty of care鈥� on platforms like Facebook and YouTube 鈥渢o keep people using their platforms safe.鈥� The government portrays this mandate positively, claiming that the authority given to Ofcom will be 鈥渇lexible and can adapt to the rapid emergence of new harms and technologies.鈥� But of are enormous in the technology sector.

may very well have good intentions. In support of this regulatory move, U.K. officials chiefly cite concerns about online child exploitation, self-harm, and the dissemination of terrorist propaganda.

But of course, consequences, not intentions, matter. The introduction of a vague 鈥渄uty of care鈥� for platforms owners will inevitably curtail users鈥� speech on those platforms. Faced with a choice between potentially incurring billions in or removing the occasional user鈥檚 post, the rational choice for platform owners is obvious. Worse yet, a 鈥渄uty of care鈥� can easily become the pretext for political or other forms of censorship. Under a 鈥渄uty of care,鈥� online platforms have a lawful opportunity to exclude views the platform owners do not share.

And as our experience here in the U.S. shows, government need not create an online speech czar with broad, vague authority to combat narrow categories of online conduct. In the U.S., Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act grants broad protections to online platforms against liability for content posted by users; it is, in many ways, In 2018, facing a scourge of online sex trafficking, Congress passed and the president signed into law. Rather than throw the baby out with the bathwater and wholesale repeal Section 230, though, the law merely targets those who 鈥渋nten[d] to promote or facilitate the prostitution of another person.鈥�

Mere weeks after FOSTA-SESTA went into effect, Backpage, a website that notoriously facilitated online sex trafficking. FOSTA-SESTA is and it for future erosions of Section 230. Nevertheless, it is a narrow, targeted measure that is far superior to the British alternative.

To longtime observers of European law, the U.K.鈥檚 latest move shouldn鈥檛 be particularly shocking. Of course, the U.K. has no First Amendment. In the U.K., one can be convicted of a crime for or

Nonetheless, Americans can no longer be smug on this issue. Indeed, in recent years, Americans鈥� views on free speech have hardly been inspiring. According to a over 40% of Americans support criminalizing 鈥渉ate speech.鈥� And according to a 81% of college students believe 鈥渨ords can be a form of violence,鈥� while 30% believe that physical violence is a justifiable response to someone 鈥渦sing hate speech or making racially charged comments.鈥� Yet in the same poll, 93% of college students said that free speech was 鈥渋mportant to them.鈥�

This erosion of American free speech culture is perhaps why Section 230 has come under such fervent attack in recent years by politicians of both political stripes. Citing anti-conservative bias, one politician wants to Others view the issue, similar to the British, through the prism of preventing supposed hate speech, online platforms 鈥渉ave a responsibility to help fight against this threat to our democracy.鈥� Even the attorney general has piled on,

America would be wise to avoid the British example here and should instead fearlessly lean into Section 230. Section 230 isn鈥檛 perfect, but to do otherwise would inevitably curtail lawful speech. 鈥淸t]he First Amendment is often inconvenient. But that is beside the point. Inconvenience does not absolve the government of its obligation to tolerate speech.鈥�

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