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The Consequences of Indecency (techcrunch.com)

Ron Wyden, a senior U.S. Senator from Oregon, argues there should be consequences for internet companies that refuse to remove hate speech from their platforms. An anonymous reader shares an excerpt from a report Wyden wrote via TechCrunch: I wrote the law that allows sites to be unfettered free speech marketplaces. I wrote that same law, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, to provide vital protections to sites that didn't want to host the most unsavory forms of expression. The goal was to protect the unique ability of the internet to be the proverbial marketplace of ideas while ensuring that mainstream sites could reflect the ethics of society as a whole. In general, this has been a success -- with one glaring exception. I never expected that internet CEOs would fail to understand one simple principle: that an individual endorsing (or denying) the extermination of millions of people, or attacking the victims of horrific crimes or the parents of murdered children, is far more indecent than an individual posting pornography.

Social media cannot exist without the legal protections of Section 230. That protection is not constitutional, it's statutory. Failure by the companies to properly understand the premise of the law is the beginning of the end of the protections it provides. I say this because their failures are making it increasingly difficult for me to protect Section 230 in Congress. Members across the spectrum, including far-right House and Senate leaders, are agitating for government regulation of internet platforms. Even if government doesn't take the dangerous step of regulating speech, just eliminating the 230 protections is enough to have a dramatic, chilling effect on expression across the internet. Were Twitter to lose the protections I wrote into law, within 24 hours its potential liabilities would be many multiples of its assets and its stock would be worthless. The same for Facebook and any other social media site. Boards of directors should have taken action long before now against CEOs who refuse to recognize this threat to their business.
In an interview with Recode, Wyden said that platforms should be punished for hosting content that goes against "common decency." "I think what the Alex Jones case shows, we're gonna really be looking at what the consequences are for just leaving common decency in the dust," Wyden told Recode's Kara Swisher. "...What I'm gonna be trying to do in my legislation is to really lay out what the consequences are when somebody who is a bad actor, somebody who really doesn't meet the decency principles that reflect our values, if that bad actor blows by the bounds of common decency, I think you gotta have a way to make sure that stuff is taken down."

40 of 502 comments (clear)

  1. what is indecent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    go on, define it

    1. Re:what is indecent? by JoeDuncan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      go on, define it

      OK: "stuff I don't like"

    2. Re:what is indecent? by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      go on, define it

      It's what's defined by the Wahhabi interpretation of the Holy Quran.

      We'll start with Wyden's web site(s) and email. I think sharia law should be applied.

    3. Re:what is indecent? by e3m4n · · Score: 4, Interesting

      so if you say something like "lawyers are the scum of the earth, they should all be loaded on buses and driven off a cliff" , which is most likely not a real call to action, is hate speech?

      Here is what pisses me off... we tell providers they have the right to refuse to allow someone like Alex Jones to air his content on their site because they do not agree with what he says. Fine. But at the same time they condemn a bakery for refusing to make a wedding cake for someones position they do not agree with. The 1st amendment assures you free speech, the 14th amendment assures you equal protection. If we bend the rule to allow providers to pick and choose whom they allow to have accounts and post based on whether we agree with what they say or political agenda, what grounds do they have to go after a baker for doing the exact same thing?

    4. Re:what is indecent? by Obfuscant · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think he did: "an individual endorsing (or denying) the extermination of millions of people"

      I think he didn't. That's an example. It's not a definition. If you can't tell the difference then you shouldn't be writing laws.

      Ron Wyden is the poster child for why the First Amendment is critical to society. It was enacted not to protect speech that everyone approves of, but to protect unpopular speech. You know, the speech that doesn't fit fully within "community standards" or "approved by the government".

    5. Re:what is indecent? by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sorry, it sounds like you are trying to deny the extermination of people. You can word it how you want, but I know what you are really trying to say. The Party will now have your post removed from the internet as indecent.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:what is indecent? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That’s just his definition. Other definitions of “indecent” that others have actually tried to enshrine into censorship include pornography (both vanilla and deviant), critique of Islam, calls for LGBT rights, “cultural appropriation” and so on. Indecency should never be sufficient to censor something; if you do, you are giving up free speech. Because pretty much every expression of culture or opinion offends someone’s idea of decency.

      Free speech draws the line at explicit inciting of violence, the proverbial cry of “fire” in a theatre. But we should be free to insult and offend. And they way things are going it might not be a bad idea to actually put that explicitly in our respective constitutions.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    7. Re:what is indecent? by MachineShedFred · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Now don't go pointing out basic fundamental inconsistencies in rhetoric - that's the kind of thing that makes people actually think instead of just engaging in so-called "whataboutism" and us-versus-them partisan horseshit.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    8. Re:what is indecent? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Thing is I'm reading the transcript of the actual interview and it seems like the summary is misrepresenting him a bit. For example:

      I guess, if people wanna say, âoeYou know, we oughta just have the government start dictating...â By the way, one of the most stunning aspects of the last couple of days is to see conservative politicians, people like Kevin McCarthy and Ted Cruz, they are essentially saying that the government should run private companies, the government should dictate to private companies what theyâ(TM)re doing. Iâ(TM)m sure itâ(TM)s very popular with their base, but doesnâ(TM)t happen to be the right thing.

      So apparently he doesn't want the government to be too heavy handed here.

      You know how Backpage was essentially busted? They were busted under existing Section 230 law. The reason we had problems is because law enforcement didnâ(TM)t move aggressively enough and quickly enough. And after a while everybody said, âoeOh, we canâ(TM)t do anything about it, letâ(TM)s go pass this really flawed law, SESTA and FOSTA,â

      His goal is to avoid over-reaching legislation like SESTA and FOSTA by having more reasonable rules.

      In fact if you grep for the "lay out what the consequences" quote you can see that he wants to avoid trying to define morality or "common decency" and instead lay out what sanctions the social media companies are allowed to use (I guess he means bans, demoting in search results etc.) at their own discretion.

      The summary is confusing because it makes it look like he is trying to define "common decency", when in fact he is just giving his personal opinion and using it as an example of how he would create the rules on his own imaginary social network.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  2. And when the popular opinion swings... by JoeDuncan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...and decides that things like "homosexuality", "pre-marital sex" and "mixed marriages" are "against the common decency" - then it's perfectly ok for any matching content to be removed from the internet, right? RIGHT?

    Because THAT'S what this is saying...

    1. Re:And when the popular opinion swings... by rickb928 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But that's not happening. Indeed, something of the opposite is happening.

      For many topics, or behaviors, or beliefs, any criticism or even simple rejection is being punished as 'hate speech'. You cannot disagree with a wide variety of opinions without being shadowbanned or redirected, deplatformed, or simple filtered out, and the entities doing that may ignore your requests for explanation.

      While it's popular to hang on to the old saws about how many people reject certain behaviors, and you know these since you referenced them,m it is indeed the new wave of 'inclusion' that is working effectively and uniformly to suppress opposing viewpoints.

      It's as if the First Amendment is limited to that which obeys, supports, or promotes the 'social norms', except that, of course, it actually defends what is NOT part of 'social norms'. whether those are real, historical, imaginary, or a hoped-for future reality.

      We are in this deep. Failure to stop the Internet censorship of contrary speech will at best fracture society, and at worst lead to real, physical conflict. It has actually already begun. Pay attention.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    2. Re:And when the popular opinion swings... by AHuxley · · Score: 4, Funny

      Think of what a large CPU maker could enforce with this and its own "ethics of society" when it comes to benchmarks about its brand of CPU?

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    3. Re:And when the popular opinion swings... by JoeDuncan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But that's not happening.

      Obviously

      Indeed, something of the opposite is happening.

      Exactly

      For many topics, or behaviors, or beliefs, any criticism or even simple rejection is being punished as 'hate speech'. You cannot disagree with a wide variety of opinions without being shadowbanned or redirected, deplatformed, or simple filtered out, and the entities doing that may ignore your requests for explanation.

      Right, and *right now* those same people are perfectly OK with censoring things they disagree with as "against common decency" because "common decency" aligns with their beliefs and they are utterly incapable of considering the possibility that social norms may change, and they're totally ignorant of what the consequences of such a policy would be should social norms become misaligned with their own beliefs.

      I'm trying to point out that social norms can and do change, and that if the norms should swing "against" their beliefs, they would no longer be in support of said policy - because they're hypocrites

    4. Re:And when the popular opinion swings... by e3m4n · · Score: 4, Insightful

      time and time again these idiots pull this power shit and do this without ever thinking that one day, some other group is going to use it against me.

      Even now they go gunning for bakeries that refuse to bake wedding cakes for homosexuals, because they don't have a right to deny service. Then they cheer the restaurants who refuse service to cabinet members and say they have the right to refuse service to anyone because its their business and thats their right. They cheer sites that take down Alex Jones saying its their right because its there site; but if facebook started banning accounts because the accounts were promoting gay sex, they would be strung up and an outcry to make a law forcing facebook to allow it would be circulating within days.

      hows this for hate speech.... everyone guilty of profound hypocrisy should be rounded up and executed summarily. Better for the species as a whole. LOL

    5. Re:And when the popular opinion swings... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Did you really just break off a "think of the children" ?

      This legislation is an abomination, and incredibly short sighted. Anyone who votes for this piece of trash apparently has never even looked back at what was "indecent" 50 years ago and 100% acceptable today and thought about what this law would mean, as the United States Code is much slower to adapt to shifting winds than pretty much any other thing imaginable.

      The Universal Code of Military Justice defines "sodomy" as "unnatural carnal copulation with another person of the same or opposite sex or with an animal" - it's essentially a half-assed ban on homosexuality in the Military even after Don't Ask Don't Tell has gone by the wayside, and it can only go away by an Act of Congress. Technically any active-duty or reserve enlisted homosexual could be thrown in jail for 5 years for having completely consensual sex with a partner.

      The onset of gay rights and overall public acceptance would show that the law is not exactly in lock-step with what is thought to be "indecent" in today's society. You are absolutely correct that they will never be able to define what is "indecent" but I'm still afraid they might take a crack at it, fucking it up for 50+ years while the First Amendment gets trampled under the guise of "think of the children" and other such horseshit emotional appeals.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  3. What is the consequences... by Knightman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...when what is considered indecent is decided by those in power?

    --
    --- Reality doesn't care about your opinions, it happens anyway and if you are in the way you'll get squished.
  4. You First by LarryRiedel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's start with the bad actor Ron Wyden, somebody who really doesn't meet the decency principles that reflect our values. That bad actor blows by the bounds of common decency. Make sure that stuff is taken down.

    1. Re:You First by iMadeGhostzilla · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Right on. I looked him up and the turned out to be a Democrat. What is it with liberals getting so worked up about controlling who is allowed to speak? Even Wikipedia says "Liberals sought and established a constitutional order that prized important individual freedoms, such as freedom of speech and freedom of association." Maybe it's time to redefine the terms.

    2. Re:You First by markdavis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >"What is it with liberals getting so worked up about controlling who is allowed to speak? Even Wikipedia says "Liberals sought and established a constitutional order that prized important individual freedoms, such as freedom of speech and freedom of association." Maybe it's time to redefine the terms."

      Many already have. Those original liberals are now often called "classical liberals", not to be confused with "modern liberals", who many just now refer to as the "left".

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      https://reason.com/archives/20...

      "â Classical liberalism is a combination of civil liberty, political freedom, and economic freedom.

      â Modern liberalism is a combination of social justice and mixed economy."

  5. The Enemies of Voltaire by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it" - from The Friends of Voltaire

    This kind of commitment to free speech is a pillar of classical liberalism. Sen. Wyden is interested in the opposite: infringing civil rights.

    Hate speech does poorly in a free marketplace of ideas, and brings discredit upon the speaker. There is no need to infringe freedom of speech, one of the most fundamental civil rights.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
    1. Re:The Enemies of Voltaire by JoeDuncan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hate speech does poorly in a free marketplace of ideas, and brings discredit upon the speaker. There is no need to infringe freedom of speech, one of the most fundamental civil rights.

      Yeah, but if allow people to speak and expose their atrocious ideas, then the SJWs will no longer simply be able to decide in advance for the rest of us who the nazis are...

      By letting people speak, you are infringing on the rights of the SJWs to arbitrarily decide who the "bad guys" are

    2. Re:The Enemies of Voltaire by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wyden says "platforms should be punished" if they don't censor despicable Alex Jones-type speech.

      Sorry, the end of "protecting Section 230" doesn't justify that means. Saying that we should censor, so that we won't have to censor, is a pretty poor solution.

      Now, I said that hate speech does poorly in a free marketplace of ideas. You disagreed.

      Look at the highly-publicized white nationalist rally that was held on Aug 12. Out of 326 million Americans, only 24 people showed up to that rally.

      If that's not an example of an idea that's "doing poorly," I don't know what is.

      --
      That that is is that that that that is not is not.
    3. Re:The Enemies of Voltaire by markdavis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >"There are more hate groups now than ever before."

      Actually no. It might APPEAR there are more "hate groups", but only because of the way the media is covering such topics.

      >"The problem isn't that they're not being stigmatized, it's that people without basic decency are now embracing the hate. That's the reason Trump was elected, and why this countries conservatives are on a seemingly one way ticket to all out fascism."

      That is just utter nonsense. The vast majority of hate I see is from the left and SJW's. The reason Trump was elected was primarily due to people getting fed up with the "establishment" politicians- on both sides. There is no denying he certainly has been different.

  6. Larry Flynt by waspleg · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Free speech only important if it's offensive".

  7. One step, then one more... by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 4, Informative

    The thing is, the online services have already taken that first step by agreeing together to remove Alex Jones from all the major social media sites.

    The fact that Alex Jones is a reprehensible conspiracy-mongering nutburger is beside the point. Of course he is. Anyone with two neurons capable of achieving a synapse can tell that.

    But he's far less of an evil than Holocaust deniers and actual Nazis. If they can remove the lesser evil, whey are they hesitating to remove the greater evil?

    They've already passed the "That's already been decided; now we're just haggling about the price" point with the Alex Jones thing.

    The only way to win this game is to refuse to start playing it in the first place, but that horse left the barn a few weeks ago.

    1. Re:One step, then one more... by BitterOak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But he's far less of an evil than Holocaust deniers and actual Nazis.

      Actual Nazis, yes. Holocaust deniers, no. Actual Nazis were dangerous not because of their words, but their actions. It was the fact that they murdered millions of innocent people that made them evil and dangerous, not their speech. Holocaust deniers are not nearly as dangerous as those that would attempt to control the teaching of history through legislation.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
  8. This IS a constitutional issue by mysidia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Social media cannot exist without the legal protections of Section 230. That protection is not constitutional, it's statutory.

    The first amendment states the following:

    Amendment I. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    The first amendment is intended to restrain congress from acting against free speech. If revising or removing the Section 230 protections has a chilling effect on free expression, then Congress has abridged free speech, and the act of modifying Section 230 was then unconstitutional. It does not matter that Section 230 did not exist at the time the constitution was made ---- Today we enjoy certain free speech rights, And a law protects platforms who enable us to exercise that free speech right. ANY attempt to curtail that by passing any kind of law or law that says an existing law shall change --- is an abridgement of Free Speech; Once congress passes a law protecting free speech (Such as Section 230) --- which is their authority to do in order to enforce the constitution, The first amendment ensures congress does not have the right to abridge the rights of expression by cancelling that protection.

  9. Ethics of society? by AHuxley · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Who gets to set that "ethics of society" for political speech? One side of US politics for political comments?
    Who gets to flag and enforce that "ethics of society" on US domestic politics? Followers of one side of US politics?

    The USA saw what "chilling effect on expression" was like under the tyranny of a UK monarchy.
    Thats why the USA protects the freedom of speech and freedom after speech.
    Why the USA has freedom of the press.
    The right to peaceably assemble.
    To petition for a governmental redress of grievances.

    Self-evident under God. Not the changing partisan politics to "reflect the ethics of society".

    US freedoms are protected from governments, not for governments to set limits on.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  10. You don't have to wait for that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Simply look at the problems global platforms are experiencing with foreign governments currently.

    Twitter pressured to remove content because it offends the thin-skinned leader of another country (China, Turkey). I mean really, Winnie the Pooh is offensive? Imagine Trump having the power to ban all pictures and references to Cheetos from the internet because its "offensive" to his supporters!

    The bigger problem though is vocal minorities.

    Imagine the US Government forcing YouTube to remove Mark Meechan's (Nazi dog guy's) videos because a small group of people with no sense of humor complained.
    Imagine Facebook removing a Harry Potter fan page because a group of angry Bible Belt moms complained it was "of the devil" and offensive.
    Imagine the knee-jerk reaction to the next mass shooting being to remove whatever imagined influence (Ozzy Osbourne, Iron maiden, D&D, Magic the Gathering, Marilyn Manson, Call of Duty, etc) from the internet "to prevent it happening again".

    This isn't a slippery slope. Its a cliff. And we're standing at the edge with one foot over the drop while politicians stand behind us screaming that somehow that step will be good for us.

  11. Re:It was good while it lasted... by thesupraman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, its almost as if they dont already have plenty of existing laws that can be applied for anything that is ACTUALLY ILLEGAL.
    What this is pushing for is government oversight on the morality of discussions, and anyone who doesn't understand that deserves to suffer the consequences.

    Someone online engaging in actual slander, actual threats, actual hate speech (already getting blurry there) already has LAWS THAT CAN BE APPLIED.

    'On the internet' is not some kind of magic legal umbrella.

    The larger concern here is farcebook et.al. acting like they have common-carrier like protections and yet ALSO engaging in selective removal of content.
    They cannot have it both ways.. Or at least they should not be able to.

  12. Re: To be offended or to offend by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's stupid. I can call you a dick, a cunt, an asshole, a fuckwit, a retard, a moron, an imbecile, a douchebag, a jackass, or a buffoon, and that's all perfectly acceptable and not hate speech. But I can't call you a n*gger or a f*ggot, because hate speech. But you can call me a cracker or a breeder, because hand waving.

    Who the fuck makes up this bullshit? Idiots with too much time on their hands and an IQ smaller than their waist band.

  13. Re:It was good while it lasted... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, but Senator Wyden doesn't like that the meanies get to spew their ignorant crap, so instead of punishing the people that are "editorializing" he's going after the publishers.

    Because clearly Mark Zuckerberg needs a few more congressional subpoenas because people are mean on the Internet.

    How is this not a clear violation of the First Amendment again? Sure sounds like he's trying to get Congress to make a law abridging free speech, and it won't hold up to the so-called "yelling fire in a theater" test as it's not endangering public safety or willful negligence. In the best case, it's trolling or extreme ignorance - worst case is this is a back door for government abuse of power to go after political enemies and malcontents because you don't like what they're saying.

    Who is the arbiter of what's "decent" under this law anyway?

    Oh, Senator Wyden. I voted for you once upon a time when you hadn't gone full idiot...

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  14. Re: To be offended or to offend by ichthus · · Score: 4, Funny

    An astute observation. You're one smart motherfucker!

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    sig: sauer
  15. Re:It was good while it lasted... by BlueStrat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who is the arbiter of what's "decent" under this law anyway?

    Allow me to condense Sen, Wyden's remarks;

    "We must infringe upon your freedom to prevent those we deem Nazis from infringing upon your freedom." -- Sen. Ron Wyden (D) 2018

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  16. Re:Alex Jones by e3m4n · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would rather not. There have been conspiracy groups forever. JFK assasinations, moon landings, UFOs, con-trails, you name it. It was _never_ a real threat until they started banning it. By banning it they have given more credibility to this guy than anything they could have ever done by just letting him get on his soap box weekly.

  17. Re:Nope, Davis, you're dithering in "Social Justic by markdavis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not really. "Social Justice", at least as it is practiced today, appears to be not concerned with equal opportunity but equal OUTCOMES. The only way to make THAT happen is to remove those three aspirations of classical liberalism: political freedom, civil liberty, and economic freedom. It is a belief that somehow everyone is a victim and everyone else owes you something. To to promote it, they foster "identity politics" where people are not individuals, but just parts of either victim or oppressor "groups." And to "rectify it", they seek government and corporate assistance, demonize anyone who disagrees, and seek to shut down any rational conversation in any way possible- like appealing to emotion instead of facts and banning speech. Gone is individual responsibility and gratefulness, replaced with blame, sadness, and outrage. That is the modern social justice warrior, at least as I have observed.

  18. Re:Alex Jones by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It was _never_ a real threat until they started banning it.

    I would say they were never a threat until POTUS started spreading them. These conspiracy theories have become a strategy to hold on to power when the shit hits the fan, and at the expense of the mental health of his base.

  19. Re:Alex Jones by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Funny

    moon landings, UFOs, con-trails, you name it

    You misspelled CHEMtrails. I see you're just another stoge of the deep state trying to spread misinformation: downplaying it by changing its name. We're on to you. and I'm safe protected from my tinfoil hat AND tinfoil breathing mask. Sure that make it a little hard to breathe and

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  20. Re:Alex Jones by GameboyRMH · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What's made conspiracy theories and Alex Jones in particular "a real threat" recently is their widespread harassment of the families of mass shooting victims, driven by the relatively recent rise of false flag conspiracy theories around mass shootings (the shooting was a false flag, therefore the families of the fake people who didn't die are "crisis actors," therefore let's harass the shit out of them until they admit their ties to the Illuminati!).

    Alex Jones in particular has driven many targeted harassment campaigns against these family members.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  21. Re:Alex Jones by Kielistic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you get banned from every restaurant in town, you need to admit that you have a problem.

    Pretty sure that was the message some certain southerners wanted a certain other group to learn.

    Facebook, et al. are losing more users by not banning Infowars than by banning them.

    Do you have any reason to believe that or are you just making it up? These groups have been on those platforms since the beginning and it has never been a problem until we got onto this new censorship push.