Thursday, November 15, 2018


Should social media firms be prevented from censoring speech they dislike?

What makes it acceptable for Twitter to deplatform widely unpopular members, but wrong for the Department of Justice to jail those with dissident views? As it turns out, nothing makes it acceptable. As Princeton students grapple with questions of free speech, they should consider the effects of social media companies on that speech. Anyone who is committed to a substantive right to free speech against government intervention should support a similar principle in the context of corporations policing speech.

Think about why we limit the government’s ability to censor speech in the first place: the government is large, powerful, and has an interest in suppressing dissident opinions. If the government were so discerning and so inclined, it might manage to censor only the bad views. Yet, as much as you might trust an Obama to filter out only the hate speech, you wouldn’t want a Trump to be making the same sort of decision. The fact that we cannot know what political tides loom on the horizon compels us to deny government the power to censor, even if we would be comfortable with the present government having that power. In other words, government’s ability to police speech is limited in the good times to prevent abuse in the bad.

In all respects relevant to policing speech, social media giants are just like governments in that they are large and well-resourced relative to any individual. They have interests in suspending views critical of them. Worse, they are unaccountable, and certainly more so than governments. A government official trying to censor someone will likely be stopped by other members of government vested with the power and incentive to check their abuse. Indeed, this is as true of the President as it is of the lowest civil servant when it comes to free speech, which is codified in our laws and our Constitution. Our government is intentionally organized with a principle of decentralization and mutual checks on power.

When it comes to corporations, circumstances differ. Corporations are highly centralized, and there is no corporate governance principal of respecting free speech. If a handful of board members go rogue and decide they don’t like someone, that person can lose their right to speak on the only platforms that matter for being heard. What does Twitter have to compel your trust that the U.S government does not? A better vibe? A nicer logo?

Of course, corporations are accountable in certain ways: shareholders can relent, and no firm seeks a public relations disaster. But that is exactly the point. To the extent that they are accountable, corporations are accountable in the wrong way. Or, at the very least, they are accountable in a way that would never be accepted as a means of keeping governments in check when it comes to abrogating individual rights. Public relations incentives and shareholder votes are to corporations as voters in elections are to governments. But speech rights aren’t the sort of protection that can be voted away. That is the entire premise of rights. No majority can determine that a minority has ceded their rights. This is a central tenet of constitutional democracy. That a majority of shareholders or Twitter users don’t like someone cannot possibly be justification to strip them of their right to speak.

A right to speak without any chance of being heard renders that right nothing more than an empty promise. Appeals made to the fact that participation in social media is voluntary and that these companies are private hold little sway in light of this. Free speech is an outcome we strive to achieve rather than being regarded as mere adherence to some legal text. Free speech is central to having a free society, useful political discourse, and a feeling of inclusion in the political process. It helps us find truth as a society and participate in civic life as individuals. As a result, when corporations are allowed and encouraged to hollow out that promise, everyone suffers.

I don’t particularly like Alex Jones. But I worry more about what is to come if we rally behind his being banned from YouTube. The moral arc of a decade will often bend the wrong way (consider the 1980s in the U.S., or the 1930s in Germany). If today we allow Twitter to ban those who are despised, we may be building the guillotine for our own heads.

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5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Free speech is free only if we are willing to fight for it.

Bird of Paradise said...

Of corse liberals think Free speech is only for them just look at many of a liberal run campuses restricting Free Speech to areas disinated Free Speech Zones less your conversation is overheard by some whining little snowflakes

Bill R. said...

Ordinarily I would say those companies have the right to do whatever they want. But as social media, they have the obligation to permit both sides of a debate to be posted. If they don't like a certain side, they can post their own rebuttal. I do not have a problem with deleting outtright, overt hate speech but just because you disagree with something does not make it hate speech.

Dean said...

Bill R. - Absolutely.

I would add that there is nobody that can be trusted to censor so-called hate speech, whether an Obama or a Trump. What constitutes hate speech is a totally subjective judgement.

Calls for violence or harm to be done are a different matter. "My opponent is dangerous and should be shot," is a call for violence and should be censored.

"My opponent is unworthy of respect," while perhaps not true and some would label as hate speech, does not call for harm and does not rise to the level of speech that should be censored.

It's interesting, by the way, that the author uses Obama as someone who can be trusted to censor speech, and Trump is not. Ahhh, he's a student at Princeton. Totally under the spell of higher education's political conditioning that leads to the belief that liberals can do no wrong.

Anonymous said...

Secton 230 of the US Code is clear. Websites cannot be held accountable or liable for user generated content.

That means that no matter what is said on Twitter, Facebook, etc., the companies cannot be held liable for it.

But there is a caveat.

Once the companies start editing or deleting content, they are legally liable and responsible.

The companies want to argue both sides of the fence. They want to claim that they cannot possible be expected to see and approve of all content, but then argue that they have the right without any consequences to edit and approve all content.

The legal arguments the companies put forth make no sense.

Both the comments by Bill R. and Dean show the problem with sites editing content. Without a clear "bright line" as to what is acceptable, there is no line at all.

Even Dean's hypothetical of "My opponent is dangerous and should be shot," under the First Amendment is protected speech. (There is no clear and true threat.)

Should sites censor what the First Amendment allows?

That answer is going to be based on a site by site basis. If the site wants to censor or edit content, that is up to them. But once they do, they are liable for all content.