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Trump To Order Review of Law Protecting Social Media Firms After Twitter Spat (thehill.com) 420

President Trump will sign an executive order later today that mandates a review of a law that shields companies like Twitter, Google and Facebook from being held liable for the content appearing on their platforms after fact checks for the first time were added to two of his tweets. From a news report: The executive order Trump is expected to sign would direct the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to propose and clarify regulations stipulated under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, according to a draft copy obtained by multiple news outlets. Section 230 protects social media platforms from facing lawsuits over what users share, though there are exceptions when it comes to copyright violations and breaches of federal criminal law. The move is set to come as Trump rails against Silicon Valley over Twitter's decision earlier this week to add a fact-check label to two of his tweets about mail-in voting. Trump, who has repeatedly accused the tech giants of political bias, has cast the decision as an attempt to "silence" conservatives and threatened to shut down social media sites altogether.
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Trump To Order Review of Law Protecting Social Media Firms After Twitter Spat

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  • If Trump repeals protections these companies enjoy from users' content then twitter will be forced to pull down 75% of his tweets.
  • sad times (Score:3, Insightful)

    by v1 ( 525388 ) on Thursday May 28, 2020 @11:04AM (#60115280) Homepage Journal

    Pretty sure most of the past presidents are rolling in their graves over seeing the current president wanting to be protected from criticism.

    The offie of the President is the chief public servant of the country, but I just don't think he gets it. His job is to do what the people want or need him to do. Criticism is the feedback that lets him know if the People think he's doing a good job protecting their interests. The only reason you'd have to suppress criticism is if you don't want to see how unappy the people are with how you're doing your job?

    He just seems to be more interested in his own agenda than doing what's right for the people, and doesn't want to hear the complaints.

    Despots, Dictators, and Kings all over the world have a fix for this, they simply have a law that says you get arrested if you insult or criticize them. I thought that was a major hallmark that it's not a Democracy. And yet here we are, with Trump asking for exactly that law.

    • Re:sad times (Score:5, Interesting)

      by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Thursday May 28, 2020 @11:20AM (#60115376)

      A point to consider is that the president today has far, far more power than was envisioned at the founding. It was never planned to be a super-star national leader, or that each incoming president would be expected to fire half the federal agency leaders and re-appoint an 'administration' of his own.

  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Thursday May 28, 2020 @11:04AM (#60115288)

    I can get why Trump is so upset over this, even given that Twitter didn't censor him or "restrict his rights" or whatever. All they did was add a link to a news story on their page next to what he posted.

    To Trump anything and everything is a PR issue and nothing more or less. Facts don't matter. What matters is whether his excitable base is going to sufficiently intimidate all GOP senators and congressmen into not defying him in any meaningful way. Or in fact any way at all. Trump has no chance of survival at all without 150% Senate backing.

    So to do this he has to be feeding his base constant crap like what he posted. His base has no idea or doesn't care whether he is lying. They will guzzle poison if he just tells them if it might work. They will go out and demonstrate with their stupid misspelled signs and vote against any Republican senator that dares blink wrong.

    In fact I doubt that the Twitter "fact check" link really had any effect at all. The people who are true believers in Trump won't give a damn about what CNN says anyway. To them anything that criticizes Trump is automatically part of the media conspiracy against Trump. Circular reasoning but it works for them.

    But Trump seems to have correctly recognized that his one major asset and the most potent weapon he has is now under attack. If he someone fails to stop this he probably believes he will draw many more such attacks. So the fear and the fury is understandable.

    • I would think that most people have given up following Trump's Twitter feed and let the news media report on the particularly egregious ones.

      The tweets themselves are tedious, difficult to read, continually contradictory and the replies consist of flame-fests with no real substantive discussions or new information.

      I'm not really sure how positive for Mr. Trump his tweets are in shoring up his base or bringing in new converts.

    • Yep. I can deal with Trump- much harder to deal with all the idiots who support him still. That is far more of a problem than one fascist leader.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        Yep. I can deal with Trump- much harder to deal with all the idiots who support him still. That is far more of a problem than one fascist leader.

        Hitler would have been just one more disgruntled veteran yelling on a street corner if it weren't for the legions of Brownshirts behind him.

  • His basis for attacking (let's be honest) social media companies is his typical narcissistic bullshit...BUT I ENTIRELY agree with removing social media companies' protections.

    If they edit content, they're not a carrier and SHOULD BE responsible for the content.

    If they are simply a carrier, they don't get to edit content. The phone company doesn't listen in on your conversation and bleep out swear words. That's a carrier. The USPS doesn't filter your letters and take out libelous statements. That's a car

    • A case of doing the right thing for the wrong reasons, then?

      But it's really an impossible problem. If you prevent social media companies from selectively deleting or moderating content, then they would be unable to enforce their AUP and wuld swiftly be flooded with pornography and weird memes - it would only take a few people to ruin it for everyone else. More seriously for them, no-one is going to want to advertise on that cesspit. If you do allow them to delete and moderate, then it's impossible for them

    • by pahles ( 701275 )
      But they didn't edit the content. They only put a link next to the content.
  • Throw a monkey wrench into social media.

  • Hypocrites (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday May 28, 2020 @11:31AM (#60115460) Journal

    Radio used to be governed by a mutual agreement between government and industry called the Fairness Doctrine. It required stations to present both sides of a political story or claim. However, when AM talk radio became dominated by the right, right-leaning politicians successfully ended the doctrine, citing "free speech" and reduction of regulation.

    I can see a similar mutual agreement forming around social media, but in fairness, bring it back to radio also.

  • On the law: I still remember an internet before social media platforms, so let any website exist that uses any mechanism to skew a discussion - nbd. Votes, likes, admin'ing, replies, dox'ing, flamebait - the general membership of any site already skews a topic by the loudest voices of the userbase. If the platform plays along - to remove exploitative, incorrect, harmful, illegal or whatever it feels like then that's fully within their sandbox. If someone doesn't like the rules of the game let them play el

  • Section 230, along with Net Neutrality, are the pillars of a free Internet.

    Without Section 230 only the biggest broadcasters can risk having content on their website, and even then user created content cannot be allowed.

    That's the point. The Internet democratized information. It made it possible, for example, to share videos like this [cnn.com] and this [youtube.com].

    The powers that be do not want that. They want us to only consume approved media censored by them. If they strike down Section 230 they get that. The Inte

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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