Donald Trump is mad at Twitter, Facebook, and other big technology companies, and in an Oval Office statement on Thursday, he pledged to do something about it.
"A small handful of social media monopolies controls a vast portion of all public and private communications in the United States," he said. "They've had unchecked power to censor, restrict, edit, shape, hide, alter, virtually any form of communication between private citizens and large public audiences."
After his comments, Trump signed an executive order designed to bring social media companies to heel. But Trump has a problem: US law doesn't give the president much actual authority over technology companies. Indeed, the First Amendment arguably prohibits the federal government from second-guessing the editorial decisions of private companies like Facebook, Twitter, and Google.
Over the last year, Trump's advisors have been trying to cobble together a package of initiatives that would respond to Trump's desire for action against Big Tech while staying within the bounds of the law. On Thursday, the president finally signed the result of their efforts. It directs various federal agencies to take steps that penalize big technology platforms for perceived political bias.
Will this strategy work? We put that question to legal scholars and policy insiders in order to game out how the proposed executive order is likely to unfold in practice. While Trump portrays the executive order as the start of a titanic battle between the White House and big technology companies, the practical results may be much less dramatic.
The centerpiece of the order is an effort to strip big technology companies of protection under Section 230, a federal law that immunizes websites against liability for user-submitted content. That would be a big deal if Trump actually had the power to rewrite the law. But he doesn't. Rather, his plan relies on action by the Federal Communications Commission, an independent agency that has shown no inclination to help. Even with FCC help, the most that will happen is a slight reinterpretation of the law—one that the courts might choose to ignore.
The story is similar for other parts of Trump's executive order. Trump wants the Federal Trade Commission to ensure companies are following their own policies on content moderation. That's the same approach the FTC takes with privacy now, and it has proven toothless in practice. Perhaps the most significant change would be redirecting federal ad spending away from big technology platforms. At worst, that would be a modest hit to the bottom lines of technology giants that rake in billions of dollars every quarter.
Section 230: An “unprecedented liability shield”?
The centerpiece of Trump's executive order is a plan to reinterpret a 1996 law that has been instrumental in the growth of the Internet economy. Originally passed as Section 230 of the then-controversial Communications Decency Act, the law gives website owners and Internet service providers broad legal protections against liability for content uploaded by users.
Section 230 says that, for example, if an Ars reader leaves a comment that defames someone, Ars Technica can't be held liable for defamation. Similarly, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter can't be sued based on the contents of their users' videos, posts, and tweets, respectively. The law also shields sites from liability if they decide to take down content that is "obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable."
The idea behind the law was to promote the growth of the Internet economy while also making sure liability concerns didn't discourage platforms from filtering online content. Previously, some online service providers had taken a hands-off approach because they feared that removing some material would expose them to liability for content they failed to remove. Section 230 was described as a "good Samaritan" law, designed to ease these worries and enable online platforms to filter and moderate online content without worrying about the legal consequences.
Ironically, some pundits and politicians have turned this logic on its head—including President Trump.
"Social media giants like Twitter receive an unprecedented liability shield based on the theory that they are a neutral platform, not an editor with a viewpoint," Trump said in his Oval Office remarks on Thursday. "My executive order calls for new regulations under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to make it that social media companies that engage in censoring or any political conduct will not be able to keep their liability shield."
As anyone who has actually read the statute knows, this is simply not an accurate description.
"As the co-author of Section 230, let me make this clear: there is nothing in the law about political neutrality," tweeted Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who co-sponsored the law as a young Congressman, on Wednesday.
To the contrary, the explicit goal of Section 230's authors was to free platform owners to make editorial judgments without worrying about the legal ramifications.
The authors of Trump's executive order seem to have a more sophisticated understanding of Section 230 than the president. Rather than peddling outright falsehoods about its content, the document attempts to narrow platforms' Section 230 immunity by focusing on a key requirement of the statute: that a decision to remove objectionable content must be "taken in good faith."
The order claims that social media companies are "invoking inconsistent, irrational, and groundless justifications" to remove content from their platforms. It argues that social media companies lie about their real reasons for removing content and that this means that their filtering decisions are not "in good faith" as required by the statute.
So what is Trump going to do about it? Here's where things get dicey.
The FCC will (probably) let this be
Section 230 is a federal statute that was duly enacted by Congress. If Trump wanted to change the law, he'd need to convince Congress to pass new legislation, something that's not likely to happen with Democrats controlling the House. Meanwhile, interpreting the statute is up to the courts. Trump gets to fill vacancies, but once a judge is on the bench, they are free to ignore Trump's views on Section 230 or any other law.
But one way agencies can influence the law is through rule-making. When a statute is ambiguous, an agency can issue new rules that clarify the law's exact meaning. Section 230 is in Title 47, the part of the federal code that governs telecommunications law. So in theory, the Federal Communications Commission might have jurisdiction to reinterpret it.
Of the legal scholars we spoke to, Jonathan Adler, a legal scholar at Case Western Reserve University, was the most optimistic about this part of the executive order. "Congress has generally given the FCC fairly broad authority under the Communications Act," Adler told Ars.
But there are a couple of big problems with this plan. The first one is that the FCC doesn't work for Donald Trump. The FCC is an independent commission with three Republican commissioners and two Democrats. Of those five commissioners, only one—Republican Brendan Carr—has shown any interest in following Trump's lead. In a Wednesday appearance on Fox News, Carr described Section 230 as "special bonus protections" for sites like Twitter and suggested that online platforms should lose those protections if they are politically biased.
The other commissioners
But it's not clear if any of the other FCC commissioners—Republican or Democrat—agree with Carr about this. Harold Feld, a legal expert at Public Knowledge, argues that Trump's executive order is "precisely the opposite" of everything FCC Chairman Ajit Pai "has ever said." Pai's entire tenure at the FCC has been focused on minimizing FCC regulation of Internet companies.
CNN's Brian Fung reports that the White House didn't consult the FCC before releasing the executive order. Pai hasn't been shy about ignoring Trump suggestions he doesn't agree with. His response to Trump signing the executive order was pointedly non-committal.
"This debate is an important one," he said. "The Federal Communications Commission will carefully review any petition for rulemaking filed by the Department of Commerce."
Trump's plan is for the Department of Commerce—which does report to Trump—to petition the FCC to reinterpret Section 230. Feld tells Ars that "the petition for the rulemaking process is fairly automatic." A Trump administration request will automatically lead to an FCC docket and an opportunity for members of the public to comment on the proposal.
But experts tell Ars that if commissioners don't want to act on the petition, they have an easy out: they can just ignore it. "Anyone can file any kind of petition for rulemaking," Feld tells Ars. He says that "90 percent of the time" the FCC doesn't do anything in response to a petition. So the FCC could easily just ignore a politically inconvenient request.
The FCC's authority is narrow
Even if Trump can get all three Republican FCC commissioners on board, it's not clear how much authority the FCC has here. Agencies like the FCC don't have the power to rewrite statutes, only to clarify them in cases when they are ambiguous. And agencies tend to get the most deference when they are interpreting statutes they're in charge of enforcing. That doesn't describe Section 230, which is enforced directly by the courts.
The problem for Trump is that Section 230 isn't particularly ambiguous. If someone sues Twitter claiming that a tweet was not taken down "in good faith," it will ultimately be up to the courts, not the FCC, to decide what that phrase means. If the FCC has issued an official interpretation of the phrase, the courts might take that into account. But the courts also might decide that the FCC's opinion simply isn't relevant.
"There's no sense in which Section 230 empowers the FCC," argues Stuart Benjamin, a legal scholar at Duke University. "I don't think any court is going to defer" to the FCC on the best way to interpret Section 230.
Even if the courts do give weight to the FCC's interpretation of Section 230, they'll only do so to the extent that the interpretation is plausible. And Benjamin argues that the clear language of Section 230 (that an online platform won't be liable if it takes down material it considers "objectionable" and does so "in good faith") doesn't provide much room for reinterpretation.
The bottom line is that Trump's strategy here is quite a bank shot. His plan is to ask the Commerce Department to ask the FCC to ask the courts to change how they interpret Section 230. The strategy will fail if either the FCC or the courts refuse to play along.
The feds might be able to redirect ad spending
Under the order, "the head of each executive department and agency shall review its agency's federal spending on advertising and marketing paid to online platforms" and report back to the Office of Management and Budget within 30 days. The Department of Justice will then review the resulting list of platforms and determine whether they impose "viewpoint-based speech restrictions" and are therefore "problematic vehicles for government speech."
Legal scholars told Ars that the Trump administration is on firmer ground here. The First Amendment strictly limits what the federal government can do when it's directly regulating speech. But the government has much broader latitude when it's spending its own money—even if that spending leads to favoring some speech over others.
In a landmark 1991 ruling, for example, the Supreme Court upheld a law banning health care providers at federally funded family planning facilities from talking to their patients about abortion. Doctors had argued that the rule violated their own First Amendment rights. But the high court rejected that argument in a 5-4 decision, holding that the government was entitled to impose restrictions—including speech restrictions—on the use of federal funds.
Benjamin argues that similar analysis would apply if federal agencies blocked ad spending on platforms with policies the Trump administration finds objectionable.
"When the government is speaking on its own, there's basically no concern about viewpoint discrimination," Benjamin said. "The government gets to say, 'Sorry, there are some outlets we don't feel like advertising on.'"
He argued it would be perfectly lawful for the Trump administration to say "we think social media is harming America, so we're going to stop advertising on Facebook."
But Ellen Goodman of Rutgers Law School argued that the issue was more complicated than that. While the government has broad latitude to decide how to spend its own money, she said, spending decisions must be "justified by legitimate governmental interest." If the government is making ad spending decisions because "the president doesn't like platforms that criticize him, that is a viewpoint-based consideration that is pretty far from an accepted government interest," she argued.
So the constitutionality of ad spending rules might ultimately depend on the specifics. If the government can come up with plausible content-neutral criteria for cutting off some platforms, the restrictions could well pass muster with the courts. On the other hand, if there's strong evidence that the government is using ad budgets to punish online platforms for unrelated editorial decisions, that could become grounds for a First Amendment challenge.
Break glass in case of unfairness
The next section of the executive order asks the Federal Trade Commission to use consumer protection laws to police the content policies of major technology companies.
Under existing law, "unfair or deceptive acts or practices" affecting commerce are unlawful, and the FTC has the authority to initiate civil suits against "any person, partnership, or corporation&Read More – Source
[contf] [contfnew]
arstechnica
[contfnewc] [contfnewc]