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Wikipedia

Section 230

Section 230 is a section of Title 47 of the United States Code that was enacted as part of the Communications Decency Act of 1996, which is Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, and generally provides immunity for online computer services with respect to third-party content generated by its users. At its core, Section 230(c)(1) provides immunity from liability for providers and users of an "interactive computer service" who publish information provided by third-party users:

Section 230
Long titleProtection For 'Good Samaritan' Blocking and Screening of Offensive Material
NicknamesSection 230
Enacted bythe 104th United States Congress
EffectiveFebruary 8, 1996
Codification
Acts amendedCommunications Act of 1934
Telecommunications Act of 1996
U.S.C. sections created47 U.S.C. § 230
Legislative history

No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.

Section 230(c)(2) further provides "Good Samaritan" protection from civil liability for operators of interactive computer services in the good faith removal or moderation of third-party material they deem "obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable, whether or not such material is constitutionally protected."

Section 230 was developed in response to a pair of lawsuits against online discussion platforms in the early 1990s that resulted in different interpretations of whether the service providers should be treated as publishers or, alternatively, as distributors of content created by their users. Its authors, Representatives Christopher Cox and Ron Wyden, believed interactive computer services should be treated as distributors, not liable for the content they distributed, as a means to protect the growing Internet at the time.

Section 230 was enacted as part of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) of 1996 (a common name for Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996), formally codified as part of the Communications Act of 1934 at 47 U.S.C. § 230.[a] After passage of the Telecommunications Act, the CDA was challenged in courts and was ruled by the Supreme Court in Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997) to be unconstitutional, though Section 230 was determined to be severable from the rest of the legislation and remained in place. Since then, several legal challenges have validated the constitutionality of Section 230.

Section 230 protections are not limitless and require providers to remove material illegal on a federal level, such as in copyright infringement cases. In 2018, Section 230 was amended by the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (FOSTA-SESTA) to require the removal of material violating federal and state sex trafficking laws. In the following years, protections from Section 230 have come under more scrutiny on issues related to hate speech and ideological biases in relation to the power that technology companies can hold on political discussions and became a major issue during the 2020 United States presidential election, especially with regard to alleged censorship of more conservative viewpoints on social media.

Passed when Internet use was just starting to expand in both breadth of services and range of consumers in the United States,[2] Section 230 has frequently been referred to as a key law, which allowed the Internet to develop.[3]

Application and limits edit

Section 230 has two primary parts both listed under §230(c) as the "Good Samaritan" portion of the law. Under section 230(c)(1), as identified above, an information service provider shall not be treated as a "publisher or speaker" of information from another provider. Section 230(c)(2) provides immunity from civil liabilities for information service providers that remove or restrict content from their services they deem "obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable, whether or not such material is constitutionally protected", as long as they act "in good faith" in this action.

In analyzing the availability of the immunity offered by Section 230, courts generally apply a three-prong test. A defendant must satisfy each of the three prongs to gain the benefit of the immunity:[4]

  1. The defendant must be a "provider or user" of an "interactive computer service".
  2. The cause of action asserted by the plaintiff must treat the defendant as the "publisher or speaker" of the harmful information at issue.
  3. The information must be "provided by another information content provider", i.e., the defendant must not be the "information content provider" of the harmful information at issue.

Section 230 immunity is not unlimited. The statute specifically excepts federal criminal liability (§230(e)(1)), electronic privacy violations (§230(e)(4)) and intellectual property claims (§230(e)(2)).[5] There is also no immunity from state laws that are consistent with 230(e)(3) though state criminal laws have been held preempted in cases such as Backpage.com, LLC v. McKenna[6] and Voicenet Communications, Inc. v. Corbett[7] (agreeing that "the plain language of the CDA provides ... immunity from inconsistent state criminal laws"). What constitutes "publishing" under the CDA is somewhat narrowly defined by the courts. The Ninth Circuit held that "Publication involves reviewing, editing, and deciding whether to publish or to withdraw from publication third-party content."[8] Thus, the CDA does not provide immunity with respect to content that an interactive service provider creates or develops entirely by themselves.[9][10] CDA immunity also does not bar an action based on promissory estoppel.[11][12] As of mid-2016, courts have issued conflicting decisions regarding the scope of the intellectual property exclusion set forth in §230(e)(2). For example, in Perfect 10, Inc. v. CCBill, LLC,[13] the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the exception for intellectual property law applies only to federal intellectual property claims such as copyright infringement, trademark infringement, and patents, reversing a district court ruling that the exception applies to state-law right of publicity claims.[14] The 9th Circuit's decision in Perfect 10 conflicts with conclusions from other courts including Doe v. Friendfinder. The Friendfinder court specifically discussed and rejected the lower court's reading of "intellectual property law" in CCBill and held that the immunity does not reach state right of publicity claims.[15]

Two bills passed since the passage of Section 230 have added further limits to its protections. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act in 1998, service providers must comply with additional requirements for copyright infringement to maintain safe harbor protections from liability, as defined in the DMCA's Title II, Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act.[16] The Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (the FOSTA-SESTA act) of 2018 eliminated the safe harbor for service providers in relationship to federal and state sex trafficking laws.

Background and passage edit

Prior to the Internet, case law was clear that a liability line was drawn between publishers of content and distributors of content; a publisher would be expected to have awareness of material it was publishing and thus should be held liable for any illegal content it published, while a distributor would likely not be aware and thus would be immune. This was established in the 1959 case, Smith v. California,[17] where the Supreme Court ruled that putting liability on the provider (a book store in this case) would have "a collateral effect of inhibiting the freedom of expression, by making the individual the more reluctant to exercise it."[18]

In the early 1990s, the Internet became more widely adopted and created means for users to engage in forums and other user-generated content. While this helped to expand the use of the Internet, it also resulted in a number of legal cases putting service providers at fault for the content generated by its users. This concern was raised by legal challenges against CompuServe and Prodigy, which were early service providers at that time.[19] CompuServe stated it would not attempt to regulate what users posted on its services, while Prodigy had employed a team of moderators to validate content. Both companies faced legal challenges related to content posted by their users. In Cubby, Inc. v. CompuServe Inc., CompuServe was found not to be at fault as, by its stance as allowing all content to go unmoderated, it was a distributor and thus not liable for libelous content posted by users. However, in Stratton Oakmont, Inc. v. Prodigy Services Co., the court concluded that because Prodigy had taken an editorial role with regard to customer content, it was a publisher and was legally responsible for libel committed by its customers.[20][b]

 
 
Chris Cox (left) and Ron Wyden, the framers of Section 230

Service providers made their Congresspersons aware of these cases, believing that if followed by other courts across the nation, the cases would stifle the growth of the Internet.[21] United States Representative Christopher Cox (R-CA) had read an article about the two cases and felt the decisions were backwards. "It struck me that if that rule was going to take hold then the internet would become the Wild West and nobody would have any incentive to keep the internet civil," Cox stated.[22]

At the time, Congress was preparing the Communications Decency Act (CDA), part of the omnibus Telecommunications Act of 1996, which was designed to make knowingly sending indecent or obscene material to minors a criminal offense. A version of the CDA had passed through the Senate pushed by Senator J. James Exon (D-NE).[23] People in a grassroots effort in the tech industry reacted to try to convince the House of Representatives to challenge Exon's bill. Based on the Stratton Oakmont decision, Congress recognized that requiring service providers to block indecent content would make them be treated as publishers in the context of the First Amendment, and thus would make them become liable for other content such as libel, not set out in the existing CDA.[19] Cox and fellow Representative Ron Wyden (D-OR) wrote the House bill's section 509, titled the Internet Freedom and Family Empowerment Act, designed to override the decision from Stratton Oakmont, so that a service provider could moderate content as necessary and would not have to act as a wholly neutral conduit. The new provision was added to the text of the proposed statute while the CDA was in conference within the House.

The overall Telecommunications Act, with both Exon's CDA and Cox/Wyden's provision, passed both Houses by near-unanimous votes and was signed into law by President Bill Clinton by February 1996.[24] Cox/Wyden's section became Section 509 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and became law as a new Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934. The anti-indecency portion of the CDA was immediately challenged on passage, resulting in the Supreme Court 1997 case, Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, that ruled all of the anti-indecency sections of the CDA were unconstitutional, but left Section 230, among other provisions of the Act, as law.[25]

Impact edit

Section 230 has often been called "The 26 words that made the Internet".[2] The passage and subsequent legal history supporting the constitutionality of Section 230 have been considered essential to the growth of the Internet through the early part of the 21st century. Coupled with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) of 1998, Section 230 provides internet service providers safe harbors to operate as intermediaries of content without fear of being liable for that content as long as they take reasonable steps to delete or prevent access to that content. These protections allowed experimental and novel applications in the Internet area without fear of legal ramifications, creating the foundations of modern Internet services such as advanced search engines, social media, video streaming, and cloud computing. NERA Economic Consulting estimated in 2017 that Section 230 and the DMCA, combined, contributed about 425,000 jobs to the U.S. in 2017 and represented a total revenue of US$44 billion annually.[26]

Subsequent history edit

Early challenges – Zeran v. AOL (1997–2008) edit

The first major challenge to Section 230 itself was Zeran v. AOL, a 1997 case decided at the Fourth Circuit.[27] The case involved a person that sued America Online (AOL) for failing to remove, in a timely manner, libelous ads posted by AOL users that inappropriately connected his home phone number to the Oklahoma City bombing. The court found for AOL and upheld the constitutionality of Section 230, stating that Section 230 "creates a federal immunity to any cause of action that would make service providers liable for information originating with a third-party user of the service."[28] The court asserted in its ruling Congress's rationale for Section 230 was to give Internet service providers broad immunity "to remove disincentives for the development and utilization of blocking and filtering technologies that empower parents to restrict their children's access to objectionable or inappropriate online material."[27] In addition, Zeran notes "the amount of information communicated via interactive computer services is ... staggering. The specter of tort liability in an area of such prolific speech would have an obviously chilling effect. It would be impossible for service providers to screen each of their millions of postings for possible problems. Faced with potential liability for each message republished by their services, interactive computer service providers might choose to severely restrict the number and type of messages posted. Congress considered the weight of the speech interests implicated and chose to immunize service providers to avoid any such restrictive effect."[27]

This rule, cementing Section 230's liability protections, has been considered one of the most important case laws affecting the growth of the Internet, allowing websites to be able to incorporate user-generated content without fear of prosecution.[29] However, at the same time, this has led to Section 230 being used as a shield for some website owners as courts have ruled Section 230 provides complete immunity for ISPs with regard to the torts committed by their users over their systems.[30][31] Through the next decade, most cases involving Section 230 challenges generally fell in favor of service providers, ruling in favor of their immunity from third-party content on their sites.[31]

Erosion of Section 230 immunity – Roommates.com (2008–16) edit

While Section 230 had seemed to have given near complete immunity to service providers in its first decade, new case law around 2008 started to find cases where providers can be liable for user content due to being a "publisher or speaker" related to that content under §230(c)(1). One of the first such cases to make this challenge was Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley v. Roommates.com, LLC 521 F.3d 1157 (9th Cir. 2008),[32] The case centered on the services of Roommates.com that helped to match renters based on profiles they created on their website; this profile was generated by a mandatory questionnaire and which included information about their gender and race and preferred roommates' race. The Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley stated this created discrimination and violated the Fair Housing Act, and asserted that Roommates.com was liable for this. In 2008, the Ninth Circuit in an en banc decision ruled against Roommates.com, agreeing that its required profile system made it an information content provider and thus ineligible to receive the protections of §230(c)(1).[31]

The decision from Roommates.com was considered to be the most significant deviation from Zeran in how Section 230 was handled in case law.[31][33] Eric Goldman of the Santa Clara University School of Law wrote that while the Ninth Circuit's decision in Roommates.com was tailored to apply to a limited number of websites, he was "fairly confident that lots of duck-biting plaintiffs will try to capitalize on this opinion and they will find some judges who ignore the philosophical statements and instead turn a decision on the opinion's myriad of ambiguities".[31][34] Over the next several years, a number of cases cited the Ninth Circuit's decision in Roommates.com to limit some of the Section 230 immunity to websites. Law professor Jeff Kosseff of the United States Naval Academy reviewed 27 cases in the 2015–2016 year involving Section 230 immunity concerns, and found more than half of them had denied the service provider immunity, in contrast to a similar study he had performed in from 2001 to 2002 where a majority of cases granted the website immunity; Kosseff asserted that the Roommates.com decision was the key factor that led to this change.[31]

Sex trafficking – Backpage.com and FOSTA-SESTA (2012–17) edit

Around 2001, a University of Pennsylvania paper warned that "online sexual victimization of American children appears to have reached epidemic proportions" due to the allowances granted by Section 230.[35] Over the next decade, advocates against such exploitation, such as the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, pressured major websites to block or remove content related to sex trafficking, leading to sites like Facebook, MySpace, and Craigslist to pull such content. Because mainstream sites were blocking this content, those that engaged or profited from trafficking started to use more obscure sites, leading to the creation of sites like Backpage. In addition to removing these from the public eye, these new sites worked to obscure what trafficking was going on and who was behind it, limiting ability for law enforcement to take action.[35] Backpage and similar sites quickly came under numerous lawsuits from victims of the sex traffickers and exploiters for enabling this crime, but the court continually found in favor of Backpage due to Section 230.[36] Attempts to block Backpage from using credit card services as to deny them revenue was also defeated in the courts, as Section 230 allowed their actions to stand in January 2017.[37]

Due to numerous complaints from constituents, Congress began an investigation into Backpage and similar sites in January 2017, finding Backpage complicit in aiding and profiting from illegal sex trafficking.[38] Subsequently, Congress introduced the FOSTA-SESTA bills: the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) in the House of Representatives by Ann Wagner (R-MO) in April 2017, and the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) U.S. Senate bill introduced by Rob Portman (R-OH) in August 2017. Combined, the FOSTA-SESTA bills modified Section 230 to exempt service providers from Section 230 immunity when dealing with civil or criminal crimes related to sex trafficking,[39] which removes section 230 immunity for services that knowingly facilitate or support sex trafficking.[40] The bill passed both Houses and was signed into law by President Donald Trump on April 11, 2018.[41][42]

The bills were criticized by pro-free speech and pro-Internet groups as a "disguised internet censorship bill" that weakens the section 230 immunity, places unnecessary burdens on Internet companies and intermediaries that handle user-generated content or communications with service providers required to proactively take action against sex trafficking activities, and requires a "team of lawyers" to evaluate all possible scenarios under state and federal law (which may be financially unfeasible for smaller companies).[43][44][45][46][47] Critics also argued that FOSTA-SESTA did not distinguish between consensual, legal sex offerings from non-consensual ones, and argued it would cause websites otherwise engaged in legal offerings of sex work would be threatened with liability charges.[38] Online sex workers argued that the bill would harm their safety, as the platforms they utilize for offering and discussing sexual services in a legal manner (as an alternative to street prostitution) had begun to reduce their services or shut down entirely due to the threat of liability under the bill.[48][49]

Debate on protections for social media (2016–present) edit

Many social media sites, notably the Big Tech companies of Facebook, Google, and Apple, as well as Twitter, have come under scrutiny as a result of the alleged Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections, where it was alleged that Russian agents used the sites to spread propaganda and fake news to swing the election in favor of Donald Trump. These platforms also were criticized for not taking action against users that used the social media outlets for harassment and hate speech against others. Shortly after the passage of FOSTA-SESTA acts, some in Congress recognized that additional changes should be made to Section 230 to require service providers to deal with these bad actors, beyond what Section 230 already provided to them.[50]

In 2020 Judge Clarence Thomas made a statement in respect of denying certiorari to Malwarebytes, Inc. v. Enigma Software Group USA, LLC., which referenced Robert Katzman's dissent in Force v. Facebook. He opined that section 230 had been interpreted too broadly, and could be narrowed or eliminated in a future case, which he urged his colleagues to hear.

Courts have…departed from the most natural reading of the text by giving Internet companies immunity for their own content ... Section 230(c)(1) protects a company from publisher liability only when content is ‘provided by another information content provider.’ Nowhere does this provision protect a company that is itself the information content provider.[51][52]

Consequently, in 2023 the Supreme Court agreed to hear two cases considering whether Social media can be held liable for "aiding and abetting" in acts of international terrorism, when their recommender systems promote it.

Numerous experts have suggested that changing 230 without repealing it entirely would be the optimal way to improve it.[53] Google's former fraud czar Shuman Ghosemajumder proposed in 2021 that full protections should only apply to unmonetized content, to align platforms' content moderation efforts with their financial incentives, and to encourage the use of better technology to achieve that necessary scale.[54] Researchers Marshall Van Alstyne and Michael D. Smith supported this idea of an additional duty-of-care requirement.[55] However, journalist Martin Baron has argued that most of Section 230 is essential for social media companies to exist at all.[56]

Platform neutrality edit

Some politicians, including Republican senators Ted Cruz (TX) and Josh Hawley (MO), have accused major social networks of displaying a bias against conservative perspectives when moderating content (such as Twitter suspensions).[57][58][59] In a Fox News op-ed, Cruz argued that section 230 should only apply to providers that are politically "neutral", suggesting that a provider "should be considered to be a liable 'publisher or speaker' of user content if they pick and choose what gets published or spoke."[60] Section 230 does not contain any requirements that moderation decisions be neutral.[60] Hawley alleged that section 230 immunity was a "sweetheart deal between big tech and big government".[61][62]

In December 2018, Republican representative Louie Gohmert introduced the Biased Algorithm Deterrence Act (H.R.492), which would remove all section 230 protections for any provider that used filters or any other type of algorithms to display user content when otherwise not directed by a user.[63][64]

In June 2019, Hawley introduced the Ending Support for Internet Censorship Act (S. 1914), that would remove section 230 protections from companies whose services have more than 30 million active monthly users in the U.S. and more than 300 million worldwide, or have over $500 million in annual global revenue, unless they receive a certification from the majority of the Federal Trade Commission that they do not moderate against any political viewpoint, and have not done so in the past 2 years.[65][66]

There has been criticism—and support—of the proposed bill from various points on the political spectrum. A poll of more than 1,000 voters gave Senator Hawley's bill a net favorability rating of 29 points among Republicans (53% favor, 24% oppose) and 26 points among Democrats (46% favor, 20% oppose).[67] Some Republicans feared that by adding FTC oversight, the bill would continue to fuel fears of a big government with excessive oversight powers.[68] Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic Speaker of the House, has indicated support for the same approach Hawley has taken.[69] The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Graham, has also indicated support for the same approach Hawley has taken, saying "he is considering legislation that would require companies to uphold 'best business practices' to maintain their liability shield, subject to periodic review by federal regulators."[70]

Legal experts have criticized the Republicans' push to make Section 230 encompass platform neutrality. Wyden stated in response to potential law changes that "Section 230 is not about neutrality. Period. Full stop. 230 is all about letting private companies make their own decisions to leave up some content and take other content down."[71] Kosseff has stated that the Republican intentions are based on a "fundamental misunderstanding" of Section 230's purpose, as platform neutrality was not one of the considerations made at the time of passage.[72] Kosseff stated that political neutrality was not the intent of Section 230 according to the framers, but rather making sure providers had the ability to make content-removal judgement without fear of liability.[19] There have been concerns that any attempt to weaken Section 230 could actually cause an increase in censorship when services lose their exemption from liability.[62][73]

Attempts to bring damages to tech companies for apparent anti-conservative bias in courts, arguing against Section 230 protections, have generally failed. A lawsuit brought by the non-profit Freedom's Watch in 2018 against Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Apple on antitrust violations for using their positions to create anti-conservative censorship was dismissed by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in May 2020, with the judges ruling that censorship can only apply to First Amendment rights blocked by the government and not by private entities.[74]

Hate speech edit

In the wake of the 2019 shootings in Christchurch, New Zealand, El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, the impact on Section 230 and liability towards online hate speech has been raised. In both the Christchurch and El Paso shootings, the perpetrator posted hate speech manifestos to 8chan, a moderated imageboard known to be favorable for the posting of extreme views. Concerned politicians and citizens raised calls at large tech companies for the need for hate speech to be removed from the Internet; however, hate speech is generally protected speech under the First Amendment, and Section 230 removes the liability for these tech companies to moderate such content as long as it is not illegal. This has given the appearance that tech companies do not need to be proactive against hateful content, thus allowing the hate content to proliferate online and lead to such incidents.[75][23]

Notable articles on these concerns were published after the El Paso shooting by The New York Times,[75] The Wall Street Journal,[76] and Bloomberg Businessweek,[23] among other outlets, but which were criticized by legal experts including Mike Godwin, Mark Lemley, and David Kaye, as the articles implied that hate speech was protected by Section 230, when it is in fact protected by the First Amendment. In the case of The New York Times, the paper issued a correction to affirm that the First Amendment protected hate speech, and not Section 230.[77][78][79]

Members of Congress have indicated they may pass a law that changes how Section 230 would apply to hate speech as to make tech companies liable for this. Wyden, now a Senator, stated that he intended for Section 230 to be both "a sword and a shield" for Internet companies, the "sword" allowing them to remove content they deem inappropriate for their service, and the shield to help keep offensive content from their sites without liability. However, Wyden warned that because tech companies have not been willing to use the sword to remove content, they could be at risk of losing the shield.[75][23] Some have compared Section 230 to the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, a law that grants gun manufacturers immunity from certain types of lawsuits when their weapons are used in criminal acts. According to law professor Mary Anne Franks, "They have not only let a lot of bad stuff happen on their platforms, but they've actually decided to profit off of people's bad behavior."[23]

Representative Beto O'Rourke stated his intent for his 2020 presidential campaign to introduce sweeping changes to Section 230 to make Internet companies liable for not being proactive in taking down hate speech.[80] O'Rourke later dropped out of the race. Fellow candidate and former vice president Joe Biden has similarly called for Section 230 protections to be weakened or otherwise "revoked" for "big tech" companies—particularly Facebook—having stated in a January 2020 interview with The New York Times that "[Facebook] is not merely an internet company. It is propagating falsehoods they know to be false", and that the U.S. needed to "[set] standards" in the same way that the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) set standards for online privacy.[81][82]

Immunity from content related to illegal activities edit

In the aftermath of the Backpage trial and subsequent passage of FOSTA-SESTA, others have found that Section 230 appears to protect tech companies from content that is otherwise illegal under United States law. Professor Danielle Citron and journalist Benjamin Wittes found that as late as 2018, several groups deemed as terrorist organizations by the United States had been able to maintain social media accounts on services run by American companies, despite federal laws that make providing material support to terrorist groups subject to civil and criminal charges.[83] However, case law from the Second Circuit has ruled that under Section 230, technology companies are generally not liable for civil claims based on terrorism-related content.[84] U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has stated that Section 230 gives companies too much immunity in these area, as reported in his several dissenting statements to court orders denying certification of cases related to Section 230. Thomas believed that the Supreme Court needed to review the limits granted by Section 230.[85]

The Supreme Court will hear the cases of Gonzalez v. Google LLC and Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh in the 2022 term. Gonzalez involves Google's liability for the YouTube recommendation options that appeared to promote recruitment videos for ISIS that led to the death of a U.S. citizen in a 2015 Paris terrorist attack. Google has claimed it is not liable under Section 230 protections.[86] In Twitter, the company had been found liable for hosting terrorism-related content from third-party users under the Anti-Terrorism Act under 18 U.S.C. § 2333, without the consideration of Section 230's protections.[87] Starting in January 2023, the Supreme Court will also consider petitions related to rulings related to the Texas and Florida online speech laws, as lower Appeals Courts have created a circuit split on how Section 230 should be considered in those cases.[88]

2020 Department of Justice review edit

In February 2020, the United States Department of Justice held a workshop related to Section 230 as part of an ongoing antitrust probe into "big tech" companies. Attorney General William Barr said that while Section 230 was needed to protect the Internet's growth while most companies were not stable, "No longer are technology companies the underdog upstarts...They have become titans of U.S. industry" and questioned the need for Section 230's broad protections.[89] Barr said that the workshop was not meant to make policy decisions on Section 230, but part of a "holistic review" related to Big Tech since "not all of the concerns raised about online platforms squarely fall within antitrust" and that the Department of Justice would want to see reform and better incentives to improve online content by tech companies within the scope of Section 230 rather than change the law directly.[89] Observers to the sessions stated the focus of the talks only covered Big Tech and small sites that engaged in areas of revenge porn, harassment, and child sexual abuse, but did not consider much of the intermediate uses of the Internet.[90]

The DOJ issued their four major recommendations to Congress in June 2020 to modify Section 230. These include:[91][92]

  1. Incentivizing platforms to deal with illicit content, including calling out "Bad Samaritans" that solicit illicit activity and remove their immunity, and carve out exemptions in the areas of child abuse, terrorism, and cyber-stalking, as well as when platforms have been notified by courts of illicit material;
  2. Removing protections from civil lawsuits brought by the federal government;
  3. Disallowing Section 230 protections in relationship to antitrust actions on the large Internet platforms; and
  4. Promoting discourse and transparency by defining existing terms in the statute like "otherwise objectionable" and "good faith" with specific language, and requiring platforms to publicly document when they take moderation actions against content unless that may interfere with law enforcement or risk harm to an individual.

Legislation to alter Section 230 edit

In 2020, several bills were introduced through Congress to limit the liability protections that Internet platforms had from Section 230 as a result of events in the preceding years.

EARN IT Act of 2020
In March 2020, a bi-partisan bill known as the Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies (EARN IT) Act (S. 3398) was introduced to the Senate, which called for the creation of a 15-member government commission (including administration officials and industry experts) to establish "best practices" for the detection and reporting of child exploitation materials. Internet services would be required to follow these practices; the commission would have the power to penalize those who are not in compliance, which can include removing their Section 230 protections.[93]
While the bill had bi-partisan support from its sponsors (Lindsey Graham, Josh Hawley, Dianne Feinstein, and Richard Blumenthal) and backing from groups like National Center for Missing and Exploited Children[94] and the National Center on Sexual Exploitation,[95] the EARN IT Act was criticized by a coalition of 25 organizations,[96][97] as well as by human rights groups including the Electronic Frontier Foundation,[98][99] the American Civil Liberties Union,[100][101] and Human Rights Watch.[102][103] Opponents of the bill recognized that some of the "best practices" would most likely include a backdoor for law enforcement into any encryption used on the site, in addition to the dismantling of Section 230's approach, based on commentary made by members of the federal agencies that would be placed on this commission. For example, Attorney General Barr has extensively argued that the use of end-to-end encryption by online services can obstruct investigations by law enforcement, especially those involving child exploitation and has pushed for a governmental backdoor into encryption services.[93][104] The Senators behind EARN IT have stated that there is no intent to bring any such encryption backdoors with this legislation.[105]
Wyden also was critical of the bill, calling it "a transparent and deeply cynical effort by a few well-connected corporations and the Trump administration to use child sexual abuse to their political advantage, the impact to free speech and the security and privacy of every single American be damned."[93][106] Graham stated that the goal of the bill was "to do this in a balanced way that doesn't overly inhibit innovation, but forcibly deals with child exploitation."[107] As an implicit response to EARN IT, Wyden along with House Representative Anna G. Eshoo proposed a new bill, the Invest in Child Safety Act, in May 2020 that would give US$5 billion to the Department to Justice to give additional manpower and tools to enable them to address child exploitation directly rather than to rely on technology companies to rein in the problem.[108]
The EARN IT Act advanced out of the Senate Judiciary Committee by a unanimous 22-0 vote on July 2, 2020, following an amendment by Lindsey Graham. Graham's amendment removed the legal authority of the proposed federal commission, instead giving a similar authority to each individual state government.[109] The bill was introduced into the House on October 2, 2020.[110]
Limiting Section 230 Immunity to Good Samaritans Act
In June 2020, Hawley and three Republican senators, Marco Rubio, Kelly Loeffler and Kevin Cramer, called on the FCC to review the protections that the Big Tech companies had from Section 230, stating in their letter that "It is time to take a fresh look at Section 230 and to interpret the vague standard of 'good faith' with specific guidelines and direction" due to the "a lack of clear rules" and the "judicial expansion" around the statute.[111] Hawley introduced the "Limiting Section 230 Immunity to Good Samaritans Act" bill in the Senate on June 17, 2020, with co-sponsors Rubio, Mike Braun and Tom Cotton, which would allow providers with over 30 million monthly U.S. users and over US$1.5 billion in global revenues to be liable to lawsuits from users who believed that the provider was not uniformly enforcing content; users would be able to seek damages up to US$5,000 and lawyers fees under the bill.[112]
Platform Accountability and Consumer Transparency (PACT) Act
A bi-partisan bill introduced by Senators Brian Schatz and John Thune in June 2020, the "Platform Accountability and Consumer Technology Act" would require Internet platforms to issue public statements on their policies for how they moderate, demonetize, and remove user content from their platforms, and to publish public quarterly reports to summarize their actions and statistics for that quarter. The bill would also mandate that platforms conform with all court-ordered removal of content deemed illegal within 24 hours. Further, the bill would eliminate platforms' Section 230 protections from federal civil liability in cases brought against the platforms and would enable states' attorney generals to enforce actions against platforms. Schatz and Thune considered their approach more of "a scalpel, rather than a jackhammer" in contrast to other options that have been presented to date.[113]
Behavioral Advertising Decisions Are Downgrading Services (BAD ADS) Act
Hawley introduced the Behavioral Advertising Decisions Are Downgrading Services Act in July 2020, which would remove Section 230 protections for larger service providers (30 million users in the U.S. or 300 million globally and with more than US$1.5 billion in annual revenue) if their sites used behavioral advertising, with ads tailored to the users of the sites based on how the users had engaged with the site or where they were located. Hawley had spoken out against such ad practices and had previously tried to add legislation to require service providers to add "do not track" functionality for Internet ads.[114]
Online Freedom and Viewpoint Diversity Act
Republican Senators Lindsey Graham, Roger Wicker and Marsha Blackburn introduced the Online Freedom and Viewpoint Diversity Act in September 2020. The bill, if passed, would strip away Section 230 liability protection for sites that fail to give reason for actions taken in moderating or restricting content, and require them to state that said content must have an "objectively reasonable belief" it violated their site's terms or the site could be penalized. The bill would also replace the vague "objectionable" term in Section 230(c)(2) with more specific categories, like "unlawful" material where a website would not become liable for taking steps to moderate content.[115]
Safeguarding Against Fraud, Exploitation, Threats, Extremism, and Consumer Harms Act (SAFE TECH act)
Democratic Senators Mark Warner, Mazie Hirono and Amy Klobuchar introduced the SAFE TECH in February 2021. The bill has multiple parts. It would first alter 230(c)(1) to cover only "speech" and not "information" making providers liable for illegal speech. It would also remove the Good Samaritan immunity around federal and state laws with regards to civil rights laws, antitrust laws, cyberstalking laws, human rights laws or civil actions regarding a wrongful death. Further, it would eliminate the immunity for any speech that the provider was paid to carry, such as through advertising or marketplace listings. Finally, it would force providers to comply with court orders for removal of material related to the prior areas.[116]

Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship edit

President Donald Trump was a major proponent of limiting the protections of technology and media companies under Section 230 due to claims of an anti-conservative bias. In July 2019, Trump held a "Social Media Summit" that he used to criticize how Twitter, Facebook, and Google handled conservative voices on their platforms. During the summit, Trump warned that he would seek "all regulatory and legislative solutions to protect free speech".[117]

 
The two tweets on May 26, 2020, from President Trump that Twitter had marked "potentially misleading" (inserting the blue warning icon and "Get the facts..." language) that led to the executive order

In late May 2020, President Trump made statements that mail-in voting would lead to massive fraud, in a pushback against the use of mail-in voting due to the COVID-19 pandemic for the upcoming 2020 primary elections, in both his public speeches and his social media accounts. In a Twitter message on May 26, 2020, he stated that, "There is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent." Shortly after its posting, Twitter moderators marked the message with a "potentially misleading" warning (a process it had introduced a few weeks earlier that month primarily in response to misinformation about the COVID-19 pandemic)[118] linking readers to a special page on its site that provided analysis and fact-checks of Trump's statement from media sources like CNN and The Washington Post, the first time it had used the process on Trump's messages.[119] Jack Dorsey, Twitter's former CEO, defended the moderation, stating that they were not acting as a "arbitrator of truth" but instead "Our intention is to connect the dots of conflicting statements and show the information in dispute so people can judge for themselves."[120] Trump was angered by this, and shortly afterwards threatened that he would take action to "strongly regulate" technology companies, asserting these companies were suppressing conservative voices.[121]

 
Trump signs an executive order on "Preventing Online Censorship" on May 28, 2020.

On May 28, 2020, Trump signed the "Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship" (EO 13925), an executive order directing regulatory action at Section 230.[122] Trump stated in a press conference before signing his rationale for it: "A small handful of social media monopolies controls a vast portion of all public and private communications in the United States. They've had unchecked power to censor, restrict, edit, shape, hide, alter, virtually any form of communication between private citizens and large public audiences."[123] The EO asserts that media companies that edit content apart from restricting posts that are violent, obscene or harassing, as outlined in the "Good Samaritan" clause §230(c)(2), are then "engaged in editorial conduct" and may forfeit any safe-harbor protection granted in §230(c)(1).[124] From that, the EO specifically targets the "Good Samaritan" clause for media companies in their decisions to remove offensive material "in good faith". Courts have interpreted the "in good faith" portion of the statute based on its plain language; the EO purports to establish conditions where that good faith may be revoked, such as if the media companies have shown bias in how they remove material from the platform. The goal of the EO is to remove the Section 230 protections from such platforms, thus leaving them liable for content.[125] Whether a media platform has bias would be determined by a rulemaking process to be set by the Federal Communications Commission in consultation with the Commerce Department, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), and the Attorney General, while the Justice Department and state attorneys general will handle disputes related to bias, gather these to report to the Federal Trade Commission, who would make determinations if a federal lawsuit should be filed. Additional provisions prevent government agencies from advertising on media company platforms that are demonstrated to have such bias.[123]

 
Text of the "Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship"

The EO came under intense criticism and legal analysis after its announcement.[126] Senator Wyden stated that the EO was a "mugging of the First Amendment", and that there does need to be a thoughtful debate about modern considerations for Section 230, though the political spat between Trump and Twitter is not a consideration.[127] Professor Kate Klonick of St. John's University School of Law in New York considered the EO "political theater" without any weight of authority.[125] The Electronic Frontier Foundation's Aaron Mackey stated that the EO starts with a flawed misconstruing of linking sections §230(c)(1) and §230(c)(2), which were not written to be linked and have been treated by case law as independent statements in the statute, and thus "has no legal merit".[124]

By happenstance, the EO was signed on the same day that riots erupted in Minneapolis, Minnesota in the wake of the murder of George Floyd, an African-American from an incident involving four officers of the Minneapolis Police Department. Trump had tweeted on his conversation with Minnesota's governor Tim Walz about bringing National Guard to stop the riots, but concluded with the statement, "Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts", a phrase attached to Miami Police Chief Walter E. Headley to deal with violent riots in 1967.[128][129] After internal review, Twitter marked the message with a "public interest notice" that deemed it "glorified violence", which they would normally remove for violating the site's terms, but stated to journalists that they "have kept the Tweet on Twitter because it is important that the public still be able to see the Tweet given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance."[130] Following Twitter's marking of his May 28 tweet, Trump said in another tweet that due to Twitter's actions, "Section 230 should be revoked by Congress. Until then, it will be regulated!"[131]

By June 2, 2020, the Center for Democracy & Technology filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia seeking preliminary and permanent injunction from the EO from being enforced, asserting that the EO created a chilling effect on free speech since it puts all hosts of third-party content "on notice that content moderation decisions with which the government disagrees could produce penalties and retributive actions, including stripping them of Section 230's protections".[132]

The Secretary of Commerce via the NTIA sent a petition with a proposed rule to the FCC on July 27, 2020, as the first stage of executing the EO.[133][134] FCC chair Ajit Pai stated in October 2020 that after the Commission reviewed what authority they have over Section 230 that the FCC will proceed with putting forth their proposed rules to clarify Section 230 on October 15, 2020.[135] Pai's announcement, which came shortly after Trump again called for Section 230 revisions after asserting Big Tech was purposely hiding a reporting of leaked documents around Hunter Biden, Joe Biden's son, was criticized by the Democratic FCC commissioners Geoffrey Starks and Jessica Rosenworcel and the tech industry, with Rosenworcel stating "The FCC has no business being the president's speech police."[136][137]

A second lawsuit against the EO was filed by activist groups including Rock the Vote and Free Press on August 27, 2020, after Twitter had flagged another of Trump's tweets for misinformation related to mail-in voting fraud. The lawsuit stated that should the EO be enforced, Twitter would not have been able to fact-check tweets like Trump's as misleading, thus allowing the President or other government officials to intentionally distribute misinformation to citizens.[138]

President Biden rescinded the EO on May 14, 2021, along with several of Trump's other orders.[139]

Subsequent events edit

Following the November election, Trump has made numerous claims on his social media accounts contesting the results, including claims of fraud. Twitter and other social media companies have marked these posts as potentially misleading, similar to previous posts Trump has made. As a result, Trump threatened to veto the defense spending bill for 2021 if it did not contain language to repeal Section 230.[140] Trump made good on his promise, vetoing the spending bill on December 23, 2020, in part for not containing a repeal of Section 230.[141] The House voted to overturn the veto on December 28, 322–87, sending the bill to the Senate to vote to overturn. The Senate similarly voted to override the veto on January 1, 2021, without adding any Section 230 provisions.[142]

During this, Trump urged Congress to expand the COVID-19 relief payments in the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 that he had signed into law on December 27, 2020, but also stated that they should address the Section 230 repeal and other matters that were not addressed in the defense bill. The Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell stated on December 28 that he would bring legislation later that week that would include the expanded COVID-19 relief along with legislation to deal with Section 230, as outlined by Trump.[143] Ultimately, no additional legislation was introduced.

In the wake of the 2021 United States Capitol attack on January 6, 2021, Pai stated that he would not be seeking any Section 230 reform before his prior planned resignation from office on January 20, 2021. Pai stated that this was mostly due to the lack of time to implement such rule making before his resignation, but also said that he would not "second-guess those decisions" of social media networks under Section 230 to block some of Trump's messages from January 6 that contributed to the violence.[144] In the days that followed, Twitter, Facebook, and other social media services blocked or banned Trump's accounts claiming his speech during and after the riot was inciting further violence. These actions were supported by politicians, but led to renewed calls by Democratic leaders to reconsider Section 230, as these politicians believed that Section 230 led the companies to fail to take any preemptive action against the people who had planned and executed the Capitol riots.[145][146] Separately, Trump filed class-action lawsuits against Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube in July 2021 related to his bans from the January 2021 period, claiming their actions were unjustifiable, and claiming that Section 230 was unconstitutional.[147] Trump's lawsuit against Twitter was dismissed by a federal judge in May 2022, stating that the suit's First Amendment claims were inactionable against non-government groups like Twitter, though allowed an amended claim to be filed.[148]

In March 2021, Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Alphabet's Sundar Pichai, and Twitter's Jack Dorsey were asked to testify to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce relating to the role of social media in promoting extremism and misinformation following the 2020 election, of which Section 230 was expected to be a topic. Prior to the event, Zuckerberg proposed an alternate change to Section 230 compared to previously proposed bills. Zuckerberg stated that it would be costly and impractical for social media companies to traffic all problematic material, and instead it would be better to tie Section 230 liability protection to companies that have demonstrated that they have mechanisms in place to remove this material once it is identified.[149]

In July 2021, Democratic senators Amy Klobuchar and Ben Ray Luján introduced the Health Misinformation Act, which is intended primarily to combat COVID-19 misinformation. It would add a carveout to Section 230 to make companies liable for the publication of "health misinformation" during a "public health emergency" — as established by the Department of Health and Human Services — if the content is promoted to users via algorithmic decisions.[150]

Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act edit

Following Frances Haugen's testimony to Congress that related to her whistleblowing on Facebook's internal handling of content, House Democrats Anna Eshoo, Frank Pallone Jr., Mike Doyle, and Jan Schakowsky introduced the "Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act" in October 2021, which is in committee as H.R.5596. The bill would remove Section 230 protections for service providers related to personalized recommendation algorithms that present content to users if those algorithms knowingly or recklessly deliver content that contributes to physical or severe emotional injury.[151] "The last few years have proven that the more outrageous and extremist content social media platforms promote, the more engagement and advertising dollars they rake in," said Representative Frank Pallone Jr., the chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee. "By now it's painfully clear that neither the market nor public pressure will stop social media companies from elevating disinformation and extremism, so we have no choice but to legislate, and now it's a question of how best to do it," he added.[152]

State laws edit

Florida edit

The state of Florida (predominantly Republican after the 2020 election) passed its "deplatforming" Senate Bill 7072 in May 2021, which had been proposed in February 2021 after Trump had been banned from several social media sites. SB 7072 prevents social media companies from knowingly blocking or banning politicians, and grants the Florida Elections Commission the ability to fine these companies for knowing violations, with fines as high as $250,000 per day for state-level politicians.

The bill exempts companies that own theme parks or other large venues within the state, thus would exempt companies such as Disney whose parks provide a significant tax revenue to the state.[153] The Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA) and NetChoice filed suit against the state to block enforcement of the law, in Netchoice v. Moody, asserting that the law violated the First Amendment rights of private companies.[154] Judge Robert Lewis Hinkle of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida issued a preliminary injunction against the law on June 30, 2021, stating that "The legislation now at issue was an effort to rein in social-media providers deemed too large and too liberal. Balancing the exchange of ideas among private speakers is not a legitimate governmental interest", and further that the law "discriminates on its face among otherwise identical speakers".[155]

Texas edit

Texas H.B. 20, enacted in September 2021, intended to prevent large social media providers from banning or demonetizing their users based on the user's viewpoint, including for views expressed outside of the social media platform, as well as to increase transparency in how these providers moderate content.[156] The CCIA and NetChoice filed suit to prevent enforcement of the law in NetChoice v. Paxton. A federal district judge placed an injunction on this law in December 2021, stating that the law's "prohibitions on 'censorship' and constraints on how social media platforms disseminate content violate the First Amendment".[157] However, the Fifth Circuit reversed the injunction on a 2–1 order without yet ruling on the merits of the case in May 2022, effectively allowing the Texas law to come into effect.[158] The CCIA and NetChoice appealed the Fifth Circuit decision directly to the U.S. Supreme Court seeking an emergency injunction to block the law. They argued that regulations on how social media platforms moderate users' content may prevent them from moderating at all in certain situations and thus force them to publish material they find objectionable, an outcome that would violate the social media platforms' First Amendment rights.[159]

On May 31, 2022, the Supreme Court restored the injunction by court order (with four Justices, Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Elena Kagan, and Neil Gorsuch dissenting) while lower court litigation continued.[160] The Fifth Circuit reversed the district court ruling in September 2022, with Judge Andy Oldham stating in the majority opinion, "Today we reject the idea that corporations have a freewheeling First Amendment right to censor what people say."[161] The decision creates a circuit split with the potential to be heard by the Supreme Court.[161] The Fifth Circuit agreed to rejoin enforcement of the law in October 2022 while several tech companies petitioned the case to the Supreme Court.[162]

Both the Florida and the Texas law cases will be heard by the Supreme Court during its 2023–24 term.[163]

California edit

Case law edit

Numerous cases involving Section 230 have been heard in the judiciary system since its introduction, many which are rote applications of Section 230.

The following is a partial list of legal cases that have been established as case law that have influenced the interpretation of Section 230 in subsequent cases or have led to new legislation around Section 230.

Defamatory information edit

Zeran v. AOL, 129 F.3d 327 (4th Cir. 1997).[164]
Immunity was upheld against claims that AOL unreasonably delayed in removing defamatory messages posted by third party, failed to post retractions, and failed to screen for similar postings.
Blumenthal v. Drudge, 992 F. Supp. 44, 49–53 (D.D.C. 1998).[165]
The court upheld AOL's immunity from liability for defamation. AOL's agreement with the contractor allowing AOL to modify or remove such content did not make AOL the "information content provider" because the content was created by an independent contractor. The Court noted that Congress made a policy choice by "providing immunity even where the interactive service provider has an active, even aggressive role in making available content prepared by others."
Carafano v. Metrosplash.com, 339 F.3d 1119 (9th Cir. 2003).[166]
The court upheld immunity for an Internet dating service provider from liability stemming from third party's submission of a false profile. The plaintiff, Carafano, claimed the false profile defamed her, but because the content was created by a third party, the website was immune, even though it had provided multiple choice selections to aid profile creation.
Batzel v. Smith, 333 F.3d 1018 (9th Cir. 2003).[167]
Immunity was upheld for a website operator for distributing an email to a listserv where the plaintiff claimed the email was defamatory. Though there was a question as to whether the information provider intended to send the email to the listserv, the Court decided that for determining the liability of the service provider, "the focus should be not on the information provider's intentions or knowledge when transmitting content but, instead, on the service provider's or user's reasonable perception of those intentions or knowledge." The Court found immunity proper "under circumstances in which a reasonable person in the position of the service provider or user would conclude that the information was provided for publication on the Internet or other 'interactive computer service'."
Green v. AOL, 318 F.3d 465 (3rd Cir. 2003).[168]
The court upheld immunity for AOL against allegations of negligence. Green claimed AOL failed to adequately police its services and allowed third parties to defame him and inflict intentional emotional distress. The court rejected these arguments because holding AOL negligent in promulgating harmful content would be equivalent to holding AOL "liable for decisions relating to the monitoring, screening, and deletion of content from its network -- actions quintessentially related to a publisher's role."
Barrett v. Rosenthal, 40 Cal. 4th 33 (2006).[169]
Immunity was upheld for an individual internet user from liability for republication of defamatory statements on a listserv. The court found the defendant to be a "user of interactive computer services" and thus immune from liability for posting information passed to her by the author.
MCW, Inc. v. badbusinessbureau.com(RipOff Report/Ed Magedson/XCENTRIC Ventures LLC) 2004 WL 833595, No. Civ.A.3
02-CV-2727-G (N.D. Tex. April 19, 2004).[170]
The court rejected the defendant's motion to dismiss on the grounds of Section 230 immunity, ruling that the plaintiff's allegations that the defendants wrote disparaging report titles and headings, and themselves wrote disparaging editorial messages about the plaintiff, rendered them information content providers. The Web site, www.badbusinessbureau.com, allows users to upload "reports" containing complaints about businesses they have dealt with.
Hy Cite Corp. v. badbusinessbureau.com (RipOff Report/Ed Magedson/XCENTRIC Ventures LLC), 418 F. Supp. 2d 1142 (D. Ariz. 2005).[171]
The court rejected immunity and found the defendant was an "information content provider" under Section 230 using much of the same reasoning as the MCW case.
Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc. 570 F.3d 1096 (9th Cir. 2009)
The court rejected immunity for the defendant when failing to uphold a promissory estoppel claim related to third-party content that they were otherwise immune from; in this case, Yahoo! had promised to remove nude photos of the plaintiff placed maliciously on the site by an ex-partner but had failed to do so. While the Ninth Circuit ultimately dismissed the case since Yahoo! would not have been liable for the photos under Section 230, their promissory estoppel makes them a "publisher or speaker" under Section 230.[31]

False information edit

Gentry v. eBay, Inc., 99 Cal. App. 4th 816, 830 (2002).[172]
eBay's immunity was upheld for claims based on forged autograph sports items purchased on the auction site.
Ben Ezra, Weinstein & Co. v. America Online, 206 F.3d 980, 984–985 (10th Cir. 2000), cert. denied, 531 U.S. 824 (2000).[173]
Immunity for AOL was upheld against liability for a user's posting of incorrect stock information.
Goddard v. Google, Inc., C 08-2738 JF (PVT), 2008 WL 5245490, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 101890 (N.D. Cal. December 17, 2008).[174]
Immunity was upheld against claims of fraud and money laundering. Google was not responsible for misleading advertising created by third parties who bought space on Google's pages. The court found the creative pleading of money laundering did not cause the case to fall into the crime exception to Section 230 immunity.
Milgram v. Orbitz Worldwide, LLC, ESX-C-142-09 (N.J. Super. Ct. August 26, 2010).[175]
Immunity for Orbitz and CheapTickets was upheld for claims based on fraudulent ticket listings entered by third parties on ticket resale marketplaces.
Herrick v. Grindr, 765 F. App'x 586 (2nd Cir. 2019).
The Second Circuit upheld immunity for the Grindr dating app for LGBT persons under Section 230 in regards to the misuse of false profiles created in the names of a real person. The plaintiff had broken up with a boyfriend, who later went onto Grindr to create multiple false profiles that presented the real-life identity and address of the plaintiff and as being available for sexual encounters, as well as having illegal drugs for sale. The plaintiff reported that over a thousand men had come to his house for sex and drugs, based on the communications with the fake profile, and he began to fear for his safety. He sued Grindr for not taking actions to block the false profiles after multiple requests. Grindr asserted Section 230 did not make them liable for the actions of the ex-boyfriend. This was agreed by the district court and the Second Circuit.[176][177]

Sexually explicit content and minors edit

Doe v. America Online, 783 So. 2d 1010, 1013–1017 (Fl. 2001),[178] cert. denied, 122 S.Ct. 208 (2000).
The court upheld immunity against state claims of negligence based on "chat room marketing" of obscene photographs of minor by a third party.
Kathleen R. v. City of Livermore, 87 Cal. App. 4th 684, 692 (2001).[179]
The California Court of Appeal upheld the immunity of a city from claims of waste of public funds, nuisance, premises liability, and denial of substantive due process. The plaintiff's child downloaded pornography from a public library's computers, which did not restrict access to minors. The court found the library was not responsible for the content of the internet and explicitly found that section 230(c)(1) immunity covers governmental entities and taxpayer causes of action.
Doe v. MySpace, 528 F.3d 413 (5th Cir. 2008).[180]
The court upheld immunity for a social networking site from negligence and gross negligence liability for failing to institute safety measures to protect minors and failure to institute policies relating to age verification. The Does' daughter had lied about her age and communicated over MySpace with a man who later sexually assaulted her. In the court's view, the Does' allegations were "merely another way of claiming that MySpace was liable for publishing the communications."
Dart v. Craigslist, Inc., 665 F. Supp. 2d 961 (N.D. Ill. October 20, 2009).[181]
The court upheld immunity for Craigslist against a county sheriff's claims that its "erotic services" section constituted a public nuisance because it caused or induced prostitution.
Backpage.com v. McKenna, et al., CASE NO. C12-954-RSM[182]
Backpage.com LLC v Cooper, Case # 12-cv-00654[SS1][183]
Backpage.com LLC v Hoffman et al., Civil Action No. 13-cv-03952 (DMC) (JAD)[184]
The court upheld immunity for Backpage in contesting a Washington state law (SB6251)[185] that would have made providers of third-party content online liable for any crimes related to a minor in Washington state.[186] The states of Tennessee and New Jersey later passed similar legislation. Backpage argued that the laws violated Section 230, the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, and the First and Fifth Amendments.[185] In all three cases the courts granted Backpage permanent injunctive relief and awarded them attorney's fees.[183][187][188][189][190]
Backpage.com v. Dart., CASE NO. 15-3047[191]
The court ruled in favor of Backpage after Sheriff Tom Dart of Cook County, Illinois, a frequent critic of Backpage and its adult postings section, sent a letter on his official stationery to Visa and MasterCard demanding that these firms "immediately cease and desist" allowing the use of their credit cards to purchase ads on Backpage. Within two days both companies withdrew their services from Backpage.[192] Backpage filed a lawsuit asking for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against Dart granting Backpage relief and return to the status quo prior to Dart sending the letter. Backpage alleged that Dart's actions were unconstitutional, violating the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the US Constitution as well as Section 230 of the CDA. Backpage asked for Dart to retract his "cease and desist" letters.[193] After initially being denied the injunctive relief by a lower court,[194][195] the Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals reversed that decision and directed that a permanent injunction be issued enjoining Dart and his office from taking any actions "to coerce or threaten credit card companies...with sanctions intended to ban credit card or other financial services from being provided to Backpage.com."[196] The court cited Section 230 as part of its decision, and the Supreme Court declined to hear the petition to this case. However, this decision, in part, led to the passage of the FOSTA-SESTA Acts, and subsequently the dismissal of Backpage's case after federal enforcement agencies had seized Backpage's assets for violating FOSTA-SESTA.[197]

Discriminatory housing ads edit

Chicago Lawyers' Committee For Civil Rights Under Law, Inc. v. Craigslist, Inc., 519 F.3d 666 (7th Cir. 2008).[198]
The court upheld immunity for Craigslist against Fair Housing Act claims based on discriminatory statements in postings on the classifieds website by third party users.
Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley v. Roommates.com, LLC, 521 F.3d 1157 (9th Cir. 2008) (en banc).[199]
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected immunity for the Roommates.com roommate matching service for discrimination claims brought under the federal Fair Housing Act[200] and California housing discrimination laws.[201] The court concluded that the manner in which the service elicited required information from users concerning their roommate preferences (by having dropdowns specifying gender, presence of children, and sexual orientation), and the manner in which it utilized that information in generating roommate matches (by eliminating profiles that did not match user specifications), that the service was an "information content provider" and thus liable for the discrimination claims. The court upheld immunity for the descriptions posted by users in the "Additional Comments" section because these were entirely created by users.[31]

Threats edit

Delfino v. Agilent Technologies, 145 Cal. App. 4th 790 (2006), cert denied, 128 S. Ct. 98 (2007).
A California Appellate Court unanimously upheld immunity from state tort claims arising from an employee's use of the employer's e-mail system to send threatening messages. The court concluded that an employer that provides Internet access to its employees qualifies as a "provider ... of an interactive service."

Failure to warn edit

Jane Doe No. 14 v. Internet Brands, Inc., No. 12-56638 (9th Cir. September 17, 2014).
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected immunity for claims of negligence under California law.
Doe filed a complaint against Internet Brands which alleged a "failure to warn" her of a known rape scheme, despite her relationship to them as a ModelMayhem.com member. They also had requisite knowledge to avoid future victimization of ModelMayhem.com users by warning users of online sexual predators. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the Communications Decency Act did not bar the claim and remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings.
In February 2015, the Ninth Circuit panel set aside its 2014 opinion and set the case for reargument. In May 2016, the panel again held that Doe's case could proceed.[202][203]

Terrorism edit

Force v. Facebook, Inc., 934 F.3d 53 (2nd Cir. 2019).
The Second Circuit upheld immunity in civil claims for service providers for hosting terrorism-related content created by users. Families, friends, and associates of several killed in Hamas attacks filed suit against Facebook under the United States' Anti-Terrorism Act, asserting that since Hamas members used Facebook to coordinate activities, Facebook was liable for its content. While previous rules at federal District and Circuit level have generally ruled against such cases, this decision in the Second Circuit was first to assert that Section 230 does apply even to acts related to terrorism that may be posted by users of service providers, thus dismissing the suit against Facebook. The Second Circuit ruled that the various algorithms Facebook for its recommender system remain as part of the role of the distributor of the content and not the publisher, since these automated tools were essentially neutral.[84] The Supreme Court declined to hear the case.[204]
Judge Robert Katzman gave a 35-page dissenting opinion in the Force case, which was cited by Justice Clarence Thomas in a suggestion to colleagues in 2020 to reconsider the scope of immunity granted under Section 230.[152]
Gonzalez v. Google LLC (2023) and Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh (2023)
Both cases were ruled on by the Supreme Court in May 2023. In Gonzalez, YouTube, via Google was accused of aiding terrorism by its recommendation algorithm, for which Google claimed immunity via Section 230.[205] In Twitter, Twitter and other social media companies were argued to have assisted in terrorist activity under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 amended by the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act. Twitter tried to argue for Section 230 immunity but this was not considered in lower courts.[87] in the Supreme Court decision for Twitter, the unanimous court ruled that there were no actionable charges against Twitter under the Antiterrorism Act; the plaintiff family failed to state a claim for relief. Subsequently, the Gonzalez case was returned by per curium order to lower courts to review the case in light of the Twitter decision. These decisions effectively avoided raising any questions in Section 230.[206]

Similar legislation in other countries edit

European Union edit

Directive 2000/31/EC,[207] the e-Commerce Directive, establishes a safe harbor regime for hosting providers:

  • Article 14 establishes that hosting providers are not responsible for the content they host as long as (1) the acts in question are neutral intermediary acts of a mere technical, automatic and passive capacity; (2) they are not informed of its illegal character, and (3) they act promptly to remove or disable access to the material when informed of it.
  • Article 15 precludes member states from imposing general obligations to monitor hosted content for potential illegal activities.

The updated Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market (Directive 2019/790) Article 17 makes providers liable if they fail to take "effective and proportionate measures" to prevent users from uploading certain copyright violations and do not respond immediately to takedown requests.[208]

Australia edit

In Dow Jones & Company Inc v Gutnick,[209] the High Court of Australia treated defamatory material on a server outside Australia as having been published in Australia when it is downloaded or read by someone in Australia.

Gorton v Australian Broadcasting Commission & Anor (1973) 1 ACTR 6

Under the Defamation Act 2005 (NSW),[210] s 32, a defence to defamation is that the defendant neither knew, nor ought reasonably to have known of the defamation, and the lack of knowledge was not due to the defendant's negligence.

Italy edit

The Electronic Commerce Directive 2000[207] (e-Commerce Directive) has been implemented in Italy by means of Legislative Decree no. 70 of 2003. The provisions provided by Italy are substantially in line with those provided at the EU level. However, at the beginning, the Italian case-law had drawn a line between so-called "active" hosting providers and "passive" Internet Service Providers, arguing that "active" Internet Service Providers would not benefit from the liability exception provided by Legislative Decree no. 70. According to that case-law, an ISP is deemed to be active whenever it carries out operations on the content provided by the user, such as in case it modifies the content or makes any enrichment of the content. Under certain cases, courts have held ISPs liable for the user's content for the mere facts that such content was somehow organised or enriched by the ISP (e.g. by organizing the contents in libraries or categories, etc. or monetised by showing ads).

New Zealand edit

Failing to investigate the material or to make inquiries of the user concerned may amount to negligence in this context: Jensen v Clark [1982] 2 NZLR 268.

France edit

Directive 2000/31/CE was transposed into the LCEN law. Article 6 of the law establishes safe haven for hosting provider as long as they follow certain rules.

In LICRA vs. Yahoo!, the High Court ordered Yahoo! to take affirmative steps to filter out Nazi memorabilia from its auction site. Yahoo!, Inc. and its then president Timothy Koogle were also criminally charged, but acquitted.

Germany edit

In 1997, Felix Somm, the former managing director for CompuServe Germany, was charged with violating German child pornography laws because of the material CompuServe's network was carrying into Germany. He was convicted and sentenced to two years probation on May 28, 1998.[211][212] He was cleared on appeal on November 17, 1999.[213][214]

The Oberlandesgericht (OLG) Cologne, an appellate court, found that an online auctioneer does not have an active duty to check for counterfeit goods (Az 6 U 12/01).[215]

In one example, the first-instance district court of Hamburg issued a temporary restraining order requiring message board operator Universal Boards to review all comments before they can be posted to prevent the publication of messages inciting others to download harmful files. The court reasoned that "the publishing house must be held liable for spreading such material in the forum, regardless of whether it was aware of the content."[216]

United Kingdom edit

The laws of libel and defamation will treat a disseminator of information as having "published" material posted by a user, and the onus will then be on a defendant to prove that it did not know the publication was defamatory and was not negligent in failing to know: Goldsmith v Sperrings Ltd (1977) 2 All ER 566; Vizetelly v Mudie's Select Library Ltd (1900) 2 QB 170; Emmens v Pottle & Ors (1885) 16 QBD 354.

In an action against a website operator, on a statement posted on the website, it is a defence to show that it was not the operator who posted the statement on the website. The defence is defeated if it was not possible for the claimant to identify the person who posted the statement, or the claimant gave the operator a notice of complaint and the operator failed to respond in accordance with regulations.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Section 230 is commonly mislabeled as "Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act." It was the ninth section of the Communications Decency Act, and the 509th section of the Telecommunications Act of 1996; formally, Section 230 is an amendment to the Communications Act of 1934 codified as Section 230 of Title 47 of the U.S. Code.[1]
  2. ^ The details of the Stratton Oakmont case would later serve as the basis for the book and its film The Wolf of Wall Street

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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Roberts, Jeff John (December 2019). "Tech's Legal Shield Tussle". Fortune (Paper). New York City. pp. 33–34. ISSN 0015-8259.

External links edit

  •   Works related to Section 230 and the Communications Decency Act of 1996 at Wikisource
  • Full text of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
  • Citizen Media Law Project's primer on Section 230
  • Cybertelecom :: The Communications Decency Act
  • Electronic Frontier Foundation FAQ on Section 230
  • Full text of Executive Order 13925
  • Wikimania 2006: Section 230: At the Gates between Liability for Harmful Speech and Wikipedia audio lecture.


section, section, title, united, states, code, that, enacted, part, communications, decency, 1996, which, title, telecommunications, 1996, generally, provides, immunity, online, computer, services, with, respect, third, party, content, generated, users, core, . Section 230 is a section of Title 47 of the United States Code that was enacted as part of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 which is Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and generally provides immunity for online computer services with respect to third party content generated by its users At its core Section 230 c 1 provides immunity from liability for providers and users of an interactive computer service who publish information provided by third party users Section 230Long titleProtection For Good Samaritan Blocking and Screening of Offensive MaterialNicknamesSection 230Enacted bythe 104th United States CongressEffectiveFebruary 8 1996CodificationActs amendedCommunications Act of 1934Telecommunications Act of 1996U S C sections created47 U S C 230Legislative historyIntroduced in the House of Representatives by Christopher Cox R CA and Ron Wyden D OR No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider Section 230 c 2 further provides Good Samaritan protection from civil liability for operators of interactive computer services in the good faith removal or moderation of third party material they deem obscene lewd lascivious filthy excessively violent harassing or otherwise objectionable whether or not such material is constitutionally protected Section 230 was developed in response to a pair of lawsuits against online discussion platforms in the early 1990s that resulted in different interpretations of whether the service providers should be treated as publishers or alternatively as distributors of content created by their users Its authors Representatives Christopher Cox and Ron Wyden believed interactive computer services should be treated as distributors not liable for the content they distributed as a means to protect the growing Internet at the time Section 230 was enacted as part of the Communications Decency Act CDA of 1996 a common name for Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 formally codified as part of the Communications Act of 1934 at 47 U S C 230 a After passage of the Telecommunications Act the CDA was challenged in courts and was ruled by the Supreme Court in Reno v American Civil Liberties Union 1997 to be unconstitutional though Section 230 was determined to be severable from the rest of the legislation and remained in place Since then several legal challenges have validated the constitutionality of Section 230 Section 230 protections are not limitless and require providers to remove material illegal on a federal level such as in copyright infringement cases In 2018 Section 230 was amended by the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act FOSTA SESTA to require the removal of material violating federal and state sex trafficking laws In the following years protections from Section 230 have come under more scrutiny on issues related to hate speech and ideological biases in relation to the power that technology companies can hold on political discussions and became a major issue during the 2020 United States presidential election especially with regard to alleged censorship of more conservative viewpoints on social media Passed when Internet use was just starting to expand in both breadth of services and range of consumers in the United States 2 Section 230 has frequently been referred to as a key law which allowed the Internet to develop 3 Contents 1 Application and limits 2 Background and passage 3 Impact 4 Subsequent history 4 1 Early challenges Zeran v AOL 1997 2008 4 2 Erosion of Section 230 immunity Roommates com 2008 16 4 3 Sex trafficking Backpage com and FOSTA SESTA 2012 17 4 4 Debate on protections for social media 2016 present 4 4 1 Platform neutrality 4 4 2 Hate speech 4 4 3 Immunity from content related to illegal activities 4 4 4 2020 Department of Justice review 4 4 5 Legislation to alter Section 230 4 4 6 Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship 4 4 7 Subsequent events 4 4 8 Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act 4 4 9 State laws 4 4 9 1 Florida 4 4 9 2 Texas 4 4 9 3 California 5 Case law 5 1 Defamatory information 5 2 False information 5 3 Sexually explicit content and minors 5 4 Discriminatory housing ads 5 5 Threats 5 6 Failure to warn 5 7 Terrorism 6 Similar legislation in other countries 6 1 European Union 6 2 Australia 6 3 Italy 6 4 New Zealand 6 5 France 6 6 Germany 6 7 United Kingdom 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksApplication and limits editSection 230 has two primary parts both listed under 230 c as the Good Samaritan portion of the law Under section 230 c 1 as identified above an information service provider shall not be treated as a publisher or speaker of information from another provider Section 230 c 2 provides immunity from civil liabilities for information service providers that remove or restrict content from their services they deem obscene lewd lascivious filthy excessively violent harassing or otherwise objectionable whether or not such material is constitutionally protected as long as they act in good faith in this action In analyzing the availability of the immunity offered by Section 230 courts generally apply a three prong test A defendant must satisfy each of the three prongs to gain the benefit of the immunity 4 The defendant must be a provider or user of an interactive computer service The cause of action asserted by the plaintiff must treat the defendant as the publisher or speaker of the harmful information at issue The information must be provided by another information content provider i e the defendant must not be the information content provider of the harmful information at issue Section 230 immunity is not unlimited The statute specifically excepts federal criminal liability 230 e 1 electronic privacy violations 230 e 4 and intellectual property claims 230 e 2 5 There is also no immunity from state laws that are consistent with 230 e 3 though state criminal laws have been held preempted in cases such as Backpage com LLC v McKenna 6 and Voicenet Communications Inc v Corbett 7 agreeing that the plain language of the CDA provides immunity from inconsistent state criminal laws What constitutes publishing under the CDA is somewhat narrowly defined by the courts The Ninth Circuit held that Publication involves reviewing editing and deciding whether to publish or to withdraw from publication third party content 8 Thus the CDA does not provide immunity with respect to content that an interactive service provider creates or develops entirely by themselves 9 10 CDA immunity also does not bar an action based on promissory estoppel 11 12 As of mid 2016 courts have issued conflicting decisions regarding the scope of the intellectual property exclusion set forth in 230 e 2 For example in Perfect 10 Inc v CCBill LLC 13 the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the exception for intellectual property law applies only to federal intellectual property claims such as copyright infringement trademark infringement and patents reversing a district court ruling that the exception applies to state law right of publicity claims 14 The 9th Circuit s decision in Perfect 10 conflicts with conclusions from other courts including Doe v Friendfinder The Friendfinder court specifically discussed and rejected the lower court s reading of intellectual property law in CCBill and held that the immunity does not reach state right of publicity claims 15 Two bills passed since the passage of Section 230 have added further limits to its protections The Digital Millennium Copyright Act in 1998 service providers must comply with additional requirements for copyright infringement to maintain safe harbor protections from liability as defined in the DMCA s Title II Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act 16 The Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act the FOSTA SESTA act of 2018 eliminated the safe harbor for service providers in relationship to federal and state sex trafficking laws Background and passage editPrior to the Internet case law was clear that a liability line was drawn between publishers of content and distributors of content a publisher would be expected to have awareness of material it was publishing and thus should be held liable for any illegal content it published while a distributor would likely not be aware and thus would be immune This was established in the 1959 case Smith v California 17 where the Supreme Court ruled that putting liability on the provider a book store in this case would have a collateral effect of inhibiting the freedom of expression by making the individual the more reluctant to exercise it 18 In the early 1990s the Internet became more widely adopted and created means for users to engage in forums and other user generated content While this helped to expand the use of the Internet it also resulted in a number of legal cases putting service providers at fault for the content generated by its users This concern was raised by legal challenges against CompuServe and Prodigy which were early service providers at that time 19 CompuServe stated it would not attempt to regulate what users posted on its services while Prodigy had employed a team of moderators to validate content Both companies faced legal challenges related to content posted by their users In Cubby Inc v CompuServe Inc CompuServe was found not to be at fault as by its stance as allowing all content to go unmoderated it was a distributor and thus not liable for libelous content posted by users However in Stratton Oakmont Inc v Prodigy Services Co the court concluded that because Prodigy had taken an editorial role with regard to customer content it was a publisher and was legally responsible for libel committed by its customers 20 b nbsp nbsp Chris Cox left and Ron Wyden the framers of Section 230 Service providers made their Congresspersons aware of these cases believing that if followed by other courts across the nation the cases would stifle the growth of the Internet 21 United States Representative Christopher Cox R CA had read an article about the two cases and felt the decisions were backwards It struck me that if that rule was going to take hold then the internet would become the Wild West and nobody would have any incentive to keep the internet civil Cox stated 22 At the time Congress was preparing the Communications Decency Act CDA part of the omnibus Telecommunications Act of 1996 which was designed to make knowingly sending indecent or obscene material to minors a criminal offense A version of the CDA had passed through the Senate pushed by Senator J James Exon D NE 23 People in a grassroots effort in the tech industry reacted to try to convince the House of Representatives to challenge Exon s bill Based on the Stratton Oakmont decision Congress recognized that requiring service providers to block indecent content would make them be treated as publishers in the context of the First Amendment and thus would make them become liable for other content such as libel not set out in the existing CDA 19 Cox and fellow Representative Ron Wyden D OR wrote the House bill s section 509 titled the Internet Freedom and Family Empowerment Act designed to override the decision from Stratton Oakmont so that a service provider could moderate content as necessary and would not have to act as a wholly neutral conduit The new provision was added to the text of the proposed statute while the CDA was in conference within the House The overall Telecommunications Act with both Exon s CDA and Cox Wyden s provision passed both Houses by near unanimous votes and was signed into law by President Bill Clinton by February 1996 24 Cox Wyden s section became Section 509 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 and became law as a new Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934 The anti indecency portion of the CDA was immediately challenged on passage resulting in the Supreme Court 1997 case Reno v American Civil Liberties Union that ruled all of the anti indecency sections of the CDA were unconstitutional but left Section 230 among other provisions of the Act as law 25 Impact editSection 230 has often been called The 26 words that made the Internet 2 The passage and subsequent legal history supporting the constitutionality of Section 230 have been considered essential to the growth of the Internet through the early part of the 21st century Coupled with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act DMCA of 1998 Section 230 provides internet service providers safe harbors to operate as intermediaries of content without fear of being liable for that content as long as they take reasonable steps to delete or prevent access to that content These protections allowed experimental and novel applications in the Internet area without fear of legal ramifications creating the foundations of modern Internet services such as advanced search engines social media video streaming and cloud computing NERA Economic Consulting estimated in 2017 that Section 230 and the DMCA combined contributed about 425 000 jobs to the U S in 2017 and represented a total revenue of US 44 billion annually 26 Subsequent history editEarly challenges Zeran v AOL 1997 2008 edit The first major challenge to Section 230 itself was Zeran v AOL a 1997 case decided at the Fourth Circuit 27 The case involved a person that sued America Online AOL for failing to remove in a timely manner libelous ads posted by AOL users that inappropriately connected his home phone number to the Oklahoma City bombing The court found for AOL and upheld the constitutionality of Section 230 stating that Section 230 creates a federal immunity to any cause of action that would make service providers liable for information originating with a third party user of the service 28 The court asserted in its ruling Congress s rationale for Section 230 was to give Internet service providers broad immunity to remove disincentives for the development and utilization of blocking and filtering technologies that empower parents to restrict their children s access to objectionable or inappropriate online material 27 In addition Zeran notes the amount of information communicated via interactive computer services is staggering The specter of tort liability in an area of such prolific speech would have an obviously chilling effect It would be impossible for service providers to screen each of their millions of postings for possible problems Faced with potential liability for each message republished by their services interactive computer service providers might choose to severely restrict the number and type of messages posted Congress considered the weight of the speech interests implicated and chose to immunize service providers to avoid any such restrictive effect 27 This rule cementing Section 230 s liability protections has been considered one of the most important case laws affecting the growth of the Internet allowing websites to be able to incorporate user generated content without fear of prosecution 29 However at the same time this has led to Section 230 being used as a shield for some website owners as courts have ruled Section 230 provides complete immunity for ISPs with regard to the torts committed by their users over their systems 30 31 Through the next decade most cases involving Section 230 challenges generally fell in favor of service providers ruling in favor of their immunity from third party content on their sites 31 Erosion of Section 230 immunity Roommates com 2008 16 edit While Section 230 had seemed to have given near complete immunity to service providers in its first decade new case law around 2008 started to find cases where providers can be liable for user content due to being a publisher or speaker related to that content under 230 c 1 One of the first such cases to make this challenge was Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley v Roommates com LLC 521 F 3d 1157 9th Cir 2008 32 The case centered on the services of Roommates com that helped to match renters based on profiles they created on their website this profile was generated by a mandatory questionnaire and which included information about their gender and race and preferred roommates race The Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley stated this created discrimination and violated the Fair Housing Act and asserted that Roommates com was liable for this In 2008 the Ninth Circuit in an en banc decision ruled against Roommates com agreeing that its required profile system made it an information content provider and thus ineligible to receive the protections of 230 c 1 31 The decision from Roommates com was considered to be the most significant deviation from Zeran in how Section 230 was handled in case law 31 33 Eric Goldman of the Santa Clara University School of Law wrote that while the Ninth Circuit s decision in Roommates com was tailored to apply to a limited number of websites he was fairly confident that lots of duck biting plaintiffs will try to capitalize on this opinion and they will find some judges who ignore the philosophical statements and instead turn a decision on the opinion s myriad of ambiguities 31 34 Over the next several years a number of cases cited the Ninth Circuit s decision in Roommates com to limit some of the Section 230 immunity to websites Law professor Jeff Kosseff of the United States Naval Academy reviewed 27 cases in the 2015 2016 year involving Section 230 immunity concerns and found more than half of them had denied the service provider immunity in contrast to a similar study he had performed in from 2001 to 2002 where a majority of cases granted the website immunity Kosseff asserted that the Roommates com decision was the key factor that led to this change 31 Sex trafficking Backpage com and FOSTA SESTA 2012 17 edit Around 2001 a University of Pennsylvania paper warned that online sexual victimization of American children appears to have reached epidemic proportions due to the allowances granted by Section 230 35 Over the next decade advocates against such exploitation such as the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart pressured major websites to block or remove content related to sex trafficking leading to sites like Facebook MySpace and Craigslist to pull such content Because mainstream sites were blocking this content those that engaged or profited from trafficking started to use more obscure sites leading to the creation of sites like Backpage In addition to removing these from the public eye these new sites worked to obscure what trafficking was going on and who was behind it limiting ability for law enforcement to take action 35 Backpage and similar sites quickly came under numerous lawsuits from victims of the sex traffickers and exploiters for enabling this crime but the court continually found in favor of Backpage due to Section 230 36 Attempts to block Backpage from using credit card services as to deny them revenue was also defeated in the courts as Section 230 allowed their actions to stand in January 2017 37 Due to numerous complaints from constituents Congress began an investigation into Backpage and similar sites in January 2017 finding Backpage complicit in aiding and profiting from illegal sex trafficking 38 Subsequently Congress introduced the FOSTA SESTA bills the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act FOSTA in the House of Representatives by Ann Wagner R MO in April 2017 and the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act SESTA U S Senate bill introduced by Rob Portman R OH in August 2017 Combined the FOSTA SESTA bills modified Section 230 to exempt service providers from Section 230 immunity when dealing with civil or criminal crimes related to sex trafficking 39 which removes section 230 immunity for services that knowingly facilitate or support sex trafficking 40 The bill passed both Houses and was signed into law by President Donald Trump on April 11 2018 41 42 The bills were criticized by pro free speech and pro Internet groups as a disguised internet censorship bill that weakens the section 230 immunity places unnecessary burdens on Internet companies and intermediaries that handle user generated content or communications with service providers required to proactively take action against sex trafficking activities and requires a team of lawyers to evaluate all possible scenarios under state and federal law which may be financially unfeasible for smaller companies 43 44 45 46 47 Critics also argued that FOSTA SESTA did not distinguish between consensual legal sex offerings from non consensual ones and argued it would cause websites otherwise engaged in legal offerings of sex work would be threatened with liability charges 38 Online sex workers argued that the bill would harm their safety as the platforms they utilize for offering and discussing sexual services in a legal manner as an alternative to street prostitution had begun to reduce their services or shut down entirely due to the threat of liability under the bill 48 49 Debate on protections for social media 2016 present edit Many social media sites notably the Big Tech companies of Facebook Google and Apple as well as Twitter have come under scrutiny as a result of the alleged Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections where it was alleged that Russian agents used the sites to spread propaganda and fake news to swing the election in favor of Donald Trump These platforms also were criticized for not taking action against users that used the social media outlets for harassment and hate speech against others Shortly after the passage of FOSTA SESTA acts some in Congress recognized that additional changes should be made to Section 230 to require service providers to deal with these bad actors beyond what Section 230 already provided to them 50 In 2020 Judge Clarence Thomas made a statement in respect of denying certiorari to Malwarebytes Inc v Enigma Software Group USA LLC which referenced Robert Katzman s dissent in Force v Facebook He opined that section 230 had been interpreted too broadly and could be narrowed or eliminated in a future case which he urged his colleagues to hear Courts have departed from the most natural reading of the text by giving Internet companies immunity for their own content Section 230 c 1 protects a company from publisher liability only when content is provided by another information content provider Nowhere does this provision protect a company that is itself the information content provider 51 52 Consequently in 2023 the Supreme Court agreed to hear two cases considering whether Social media can be held liable for aiding and abetting in acts of international terrorism when their recommender systems promote it Numerous experts have suggested that changing 230 without repealing it entirely would be the optimal way to improve it 53 Google s former fraud czar Shuman Ghosemajumder proposed in 2021 that full protections should only apply to unmonetized content to align platforms content moderation efforts with their financial incentives and to encourage the use of better technology to achieve that necessary scale 54 Researchers Marshall Van Alstyne and Michael D Smith supported this idea of an additional duty of care requirement 55 However journalist Martin Baron has argued that most of Section 230 is essential for social media companies to exist at all 56 Platform neutrality edit Some politicians including Republican senators Ted Cruz TX and Josh Hawley MO have accused major social networks of displaying a bias against conservative perspectives when moderating content such as Twitter suspensions 57 58 59 In a Fox News op ed Cruz argued that section 230 should only apply to providers that are politically neutral suggesting that a provider should be considered to be a liable publisher or speaker of user content if they pick and choose what gets published or spoke 60 Section 230 does not contain any requirements that moderation decisions be neutral 60 Hawley alleged that section 230 immunity was a sweetheart deal between big tech and big government 61 62 In December 2018 Republican representative Louie Gohmert introduced the Biased Algorithm Deterrence Act H R 492 which would remove all section 230 protections for any provider that used filters or any other type of algorithms to display user content when otherwise not directed by a user 63 64 In June 2019 Hawley introduced the Ending Support for Internet Censorship Act S 1914 that would remove section 230 protections from companies whose services have more than 30 million active monthly users in the U S and more than 300 million worldwide or have over 500 million in annual global revenue unless they receive a certification from the majority of the Federal Trade Commission that they do not moderate against any political viewpoint and have not done so in the past 2 years 65 66 There has been criticism and support of the proposed bill from various points on the political spectrum A poll of more than 1 000 voters gave Senator Hawley s bill a net favorability rating of 29 points among Republicans 53 favor 24 oppose and 26 points among Democrats 46 favor 20 oppose 67 Some Republicans feared that by adding FTC oversight the bill would continue to fuel fears of a big government with excessive oversight powers 68 Nancy Pelosi the Democratic Speaker of the House has indicated support for the same approach Hawley has taken 69 The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee Senator Graham has also indicated support for the same approach Hawley has taken saying he is considering legislation that would require companies to uphold best business practices to maintain their liability shield subject to periodic review by federal regulators 70 Legal experts have criticized the Republicans push to make Section 230 encompass platform neutrality Wyden stated in response to potential law changes that Section 230 is not about neutrality Period Full stop 230 is all about letting private companies make their own decisions to leave up some content and take other content down 71 Kosseff has stated that the Republican intentions are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of Section 230 s purpose as platform neutrality was not one of the considerations made at the time of passage 72 Kosseff stated that political neutrality was not the intent of Section 230 according to the framers but rather making sure providers had the ability to make content removal judgement without fear of liability 19 There have been concerns that any attempt to weaken Section 230 could actually cause an increase in censorship when services lose their exemption from liability 62 73 Attempts to bring damages to tech companies for apparent anti conservative bias in courts arguing against Section 230 protections have generally failed A lawsuit brought by the non profit Freedom s Watch in 2018 against Google Facebook Twitter and Apple on antitrust violations for using their positions to create anti conservative censorship was dismissed by the D C Circuit Court of Appeals in May 2020 with the judges ruling that censorship can only apply to First Amendment rights blocked by the government and not by private entities 74 Hate speech edit In the wake of the 2019 shootings in Christchurch New Zealand El Paso Texas and Dayton Ohio the impact on Section 230 and liability towards online hate speech has been raised In both the Christchurch and El Paso shootings the perpetrator posted hate speech manifestos to 8chan a moderated imageboard known to be favorable for the posting of extreme views Concerned politicians and citizens raised calls at large tech companies for the need for hate speech to be removed from the Internet however hate speech is generally protected speech under the First Amendment and Section 230 removes the liability for these tech companies to moderate such content as long as it is not illegal This has given the appearance that tech companies do not need to be proactive against hateful content thus allowing the hate content to proliferate online and lead to such incidents 75 23 Notable articles on these concerns were published after the El Paso shooting by The New York Times 75 The Wall Street Journal 76 and Bloomberg Businessweek 23 among other outlets but which were criticized by legal experts including Mike Godwin Mark Lemley and David Kaye as the articles implied that hate speech was protected by Section 230 when it is in fact protected by the First Amendment In the case of The New York Times the paper issued a correction to affirm that the First Amendment protected hate speech and not Section 230 77 78 79 Members of Congress have indicated they may pass a law that changes how Section 230 would apply to hate speech as to make tech companies liable for this Wyden now a Senator stated that he intended for Section 230 to be both a sword and a shield for Internet companies the sword allowing them to remove content they deem inappropriate for their service and the shield to help keep offensive content from their sites without liability However Wyden warned that because tech companies have not been willing to use the sword to remove content they could be at risk of losing the shield 75 23 Some have compared Section 230 to the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act a law that grants gun manufacturers immunity from certain types of lawsuits when their weapons are used in criminal acts According to law professor Mary Anne Franks They have not only let a lot of bad stuff happen on their platforms but they ve actually decided to profit off of people s bad behavior 23 Representative Beto O Rourke stated his intent for his 2020 presidential campaign to introduce sweeping changes to Section 230 to make Internet companies liable for not being proactive in taking down hate speech 80 O Rourke later dropped out of the race Fellow candidate and former vice president Joe Biden has similarly called for Section 230 protections to be weakened or otherwise revoked for big tech companies particularly Facebook having stated in a January 2020 interview with The New York Times that Facebook is not merely an internet company It is propagating falsehoods they know to be false and that the U S needed to set standards in the same way that the European Union s General Data Protection Regulation GDPR set standards for online privacy 81 82 Immunity from content related to illegal activities edit In the aftermath of the Backpage trial and subsequent passage of FOSTA SESTA others have found that Section 230 appears to protect tech companies from content that is otherwise illegal under United States law Professor Danielle Citron and journalist Benjamin Wittes found that as late as 2018 several groups deemed as terrorist organizations by the United States had been able to maintain social media accounts on services run by American companies despite federal laws that make providing material support to terrorist groups subject to civil and criminal charges 83 However case law from the Second Circuit has ruled that under Section 230 technology companies are generally not liable for civil claims based on terrorism related content 84 U S Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has stated that Section 230 gives companies too much immunity in these area as reported in his several dissenting statements to court orders denying certification of cases related to Section 230 Thomas believed that the Supreme Court needed to review the limits granted by Section 230 85 The Supreme Court will hear the cases of Gonzalez v Google LLC and Twitter Inc v Taamneh in the 2022 term Gonzalez involves Google s liability for the YouTube recommendation options that appeared to promote recruitment videos for ISIS that led to the death of a U S citizen in a 2015 Paris terrorist attack Google has claimed it is not liable under Section 230 protections 86 In Twitter the company had been found liable for hosting terrorism related content from third party users under the Anti Terrorism Act under 18 U S C 2333 without the consideration of Section 230 s protections 87 Starting in January 2023 the Supreme Court will also consider petitions related to rulings related to the Texas and Florida online speech laws as lower Appeals Courts have created a circuit split on how Section 230 should be considered in those cases 88 2020 Department of Justice review edit In February 2020 the United States Department of Justice held a workshop related to Section 230 as part of an ongoing antitrust probe into big tech companies Attorney General William Barr said that while Section 230 was needed to protect the Internet s growth while most companies were not stable No longer are technology companies the underdog upstarts They have become titans of U S industry and questioned the need for Section 230 s broad protections 89 Barr said that the workshop was not meant to make policy decisions on Section 230 but part of a holistic review related to Big Tech since not all of the concerns raised about online platforms squarely fall within antitrust and that the Department of Justice would want to see reform and better incentives to improve online content by tech companies within the scope of Section 230 rather than change the law directly 89 Observers to the sessions stated the focus of the talks only covered Big Tech and small sites that engaged in areas of revenge porn harassment and child sexual abuse but did not consider much of the intermediate uses of the Internet 90 The DOJ issued their four major recommendations to Congress in June 2020 to modify Section 230 These include 91 92 Incentivizing platforms to deal with illicit content including calling out Bad Samaritans that solicit illicit activity and remove their immunity and carve out exemptions in the areas of child abuse terrorism and cyber stalking as well as when platforms have been notified by courts of illicit material Removing protections from civil lawsuits brought by the federal government Disallowing Section 230 protections in relationship to antitrust actions on the large Internet platforms and Promoting discourse and transparency by defining existing terms in the statute like otherwise objectionable and good faith with specific language and requiring platforms to publicly document when they take moderation actions against content unless that may interfere with law enforcement or risk harm to an individual Legislation to alter Section 230 edit In 2020 several bills were introduced through Congress to limit the liability protections that Internet platforms had from Section 230 as a result of events in the preceding years EARN IT Act of 2020 In March 2020 a bi partisan bill known as the Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies EARN IT Act S 3398 was introduced to the Senate which called for the creation of a 15 member government commission including administration officials and industry experts to establish best practices for the detection and reporting of child exploitation materials Internet services would be required to follow these practices the commission would have the power to penalize those who are not in compliance which can include removing their Section 230 protections 93 While the bill had bi partisan support from its sponsors Lindsey Graham Josh Hawley Dianne Feinstein and Richard Blumenthal and backing from groups like National Center for Missing and Exploited Children 94 and the National Center on Sexual Exploitation 95 the EARN IT Act was criticized by a coalition of 25 organizations 96 97 as well as by human rights groups including the Electronic Frontier Foundation 98 99 the American Civil Liberties Union 100 101 and Human Rights Watch 102 103 Opponents of the bill recognized that some of the best practices would most likely include a backdoor for law enforcement into any encryption used on the site in addition to the dismantling of Section 230 s approach based on commentary made by members of the federal agencies that would be placed on this commission For example Attorney General Barr has extensively argued that the use of end to end encryption by online services can obstruct investigations by law enforcement especially those involving child exploitation and has pushed for a governmental backdoor into encryption services 93 104 The Senators behind EARN IT have stated that there is no intent to bring any such encryption backdoors with this legislation 105 Wyden also was critical of the bill calling it a transparent and deeply cynical effort by a few well connected corporations and the Trump administration to use child sexual abuse to their political advantage the impact to free speech and the security and privacy of every single American be damned 93 106 Graham stated that the goal of the bill was to do this in a balanced way that doesn t overly inhibit innovation but forcibly deals with child exploitation 107 As an implicit response to EARN IT Wyden along with House Representative Anna G Eshoo proposed a new bill the Invest in Child Safety Act in May 2020 that would give US 5 billion to the Department to Justice to give additional manpower and tools to enable them to address child exploitation directly rather than to rely on technology companies to rein in the problem 108 The EARN IT Act advanced out of the Senate Judiciary Committee by a unanimous 22 0 vote on July 2 2020 following an amendment by Lindsey Graham Graham s amendment removed the legal authority of the proposed federal commission instead giving a similar authority to each individual state government 109 The bill was introduced into the House on October 2 2020 110 Limiting Section 230 Immunity to Good Samaritans Act In June 2020 Hawley and three Republican senators Marco Rubio Kelly Loeffler and Kevin Cramer called on the FCC to review the protections that the Big Tech companies had from Section 230 stating in their letter that It is time to take a fresh look at Section 230 and to interpret the vague standard of good faith with specific guidelines and direction due to the a lack of clear rules and the judicial expansion around the statute 111 Hawley introduced the Limiting Section 230 Immunity to Good Samaritans Act bill in the Senate on June 17 2020 with co sponsors Rubio Mike Braun and Tom Cotton which would allow providers with over 30 million monthly U S users and over US 1 5 billion in global revenues to be liable to lawsuits from users who believed that the provider was not uniformly enforcing content users would be able to seek damages up to US 5 000 and lawyers fees under the bill 112 Platform Accountability and Consumer Transparency PACT Act A bi partisan bill introduced by Senators Brian Schatz and John Thune in June 2020 the Platform Accountability and Consumer Technology Act would require Internet platforms to issue public statements on their policies for how they moderate demonetize and remove user content from their platforms and to publish public quarterly reports to summarize their actions and statistics for that quarter The bill would also mandate that platforms conform with all court ordered removal of content deemed illegal within 24 hours Further the bill would eliminate platforms Section 230 protections from federal civil liability in cases brought against the platforms and would enable states attorney generals to enforce actions against platforms Schatz and Thune considered their approach more of a scalpel rather than a jackhammer in contrast to other options that have been presented to date 113 Behavioral Advertising Decisions Are Downgrading Services BAD ADS Act Hawley introduced the Behavioral Advertising Decisions Are Downgrading Services Act in July 2020 which would remove Section 230 protections for larger service providers 30 million users in the U S or 300 million globally and with more than US 1 5 billion in annual revenue if their sites used behavioral advertising with ads tailored to the users of the sites based on how the users had engaged with the site or where they were located Hawley had spoken out against such ad practices and had previously tried to add legislation to require service providers to add do not track functionality for Internet ads 114 Online Freedom and Viewpoint Diversity Act Republican Senators Lindsey Graham Roger Wicker and Marsha Blackburn introduced the Online Freedom and Viewpoint Diversity Act in September 2020 The bill if passed would strip away Section 230 liability protection for sites that fail to give reason for actions taken in moderating or restricting content and require them to state that said content must have an objectively reasonable belief it violated their site s terms or the site could be penalized The bill would also replace the vague objectionable term in Section 230 c 2 with more specific categories like unlawful material where a website would not become liable for taking steps to moderate content 115 Safeguarding Against Fraud Exploitation Threats Extremism and Consumer Harms Act SAFE TECH act Democratic Senators Mark Warner Mazie Hirono and Amy Klobuchar introduced the SAFE TECH in February 2021 The bill has multiple parts It would first alter 230 c 1 to cover only speech and not information making providers liable for illegal speech It would also remove the Good Samaritan immunity around federal and state laws with regards to civil rights laws antitrust laws cyberstalking laws human rights laws or civil actions regarding a wrongful death Further it would eliminate the immunity for any speech that the provider was paid to carry such as through advertising or marketplace listings Finally it would force providers to comply with court orders for removal of material related to the prior areas 116 Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship edit President Donald Trump was a major proponent of limiting the protections of technology and media companies under Section 230 due to claims of an anti conservative bias In July 2019 Trump held a Social Media Summit that he used to criticize how Twitter Facebook and Google handled conservative voices on their platforms During the summit Trump warned that he would seek all regulatory and legislative solutions to protect free speech 117 nbsp The two tweets on May 26 2020 from President Trump that Twitter had marked potentially misleading inserting the blue warning icon and Get the facts language that led to the executive orderIn late May 2020 President Trump made statements that mail in voting would lead to massive fraud in a pushback against the use of mail in voting due to the COVID 19 pandemic for the upcoming 2020 primary elections in both his public speeches and his social media accounts In a Twitter message on May 26 2020 he stated that There is NO WAY ZERO that Mail In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent Shortly after its posting Twitter moderators marked the message with a potentially misleading warning a process it had introduced a few weeks earlier that month primarily in response to misinformation about the COVID 19 pandemic 118 linking readers to a special page on its site that provided analysis and fact checks of Trump s statement from media sources like CNN and The Washington Post the first time it had used the process on Trump s messages 119 Jack Dorsey Twitter s former CEO defended the moderation stating that they were not acting as a arbitrator of truth but instead Our intention is to connect the dots of conflicting statements and show the information in dispute so people can judge for themselves 120 Trump was angered by this and shortly afterwards threatened that he would take action to strongly regulate technology companies asserting these companies were suppressing conservative voices 121 nbsp Trump signs an executive order on Preventing Online Censorship on May 28 2020 On May 28 2020 Trump signed the Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship EO 13925 an executive order directing regulatory action at Section 230 122 Trump stated in a press conference before signing his rationale for it A small handful of social media monopolies controls a vast portion of all public and private communications in the United States They ve had unchecked power to censor restrict edit shape hide alter virtually any form of communication between private citizens and large public audiences 123 The EO asserts that media companies that edit content apart from restricting posts that are violent obscene or harassing as outlined in the Good Samaritan clause 230 c 2 are then engaged in editorial conduct and may forfeit any safe harbor protection granted in 230 c 1 124 From that the EO specifically targets the Good Samaritan clause for media companies in their decisions to remove offensive material in good faith Courts have interpreted the in good faith portion of the statute based on its plain language the EO purports to establish conditions where that good faith may be revoked such as if the media companies have shown bias in how they remove material from the platform The goal of the EO is to remove the Section 230 protections from such platforms thus leaving them liable for content 125 Whether a media platform has bias would be determined by a rulemaking process to be set by the Federal Communications Commission in consultation with the Commerce Department the National Telecommunications and Information Administration NTIA and the Attorney General while the Justice Department and state attorneys general will handle disputes related to bias gather these to report to the Federal Trade Commission who would make determinations if a federal lawsuit should be filed Additional provisions prevent government agencies from advertising on media company platforms that are demonstrated to have such bias 123 nbsp Text of the Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship The EO came under intense criticism and legal analysis after its announcement 126 Senator Wyden stated that the EO was a mugging of the First Amendment and that there does need to be a thoughtful debate about modern considerations for Section 230 though the political spat between Trump and Twitter is not a consideration 127 Professor Kate Klonick of St John s University School of Law in New York considered the EO political theater without any weight of authority 125 The Electronic Frontier Foundation s Aaron Mackey stated that the EO starts with a flawed misconstruing of linking sections 230 c 1 and 230 c 2 which were not written to be linked and have been treated by case law as independent statements in the statute and thus has no legal merit 124 By happenstance the EO was signed on the same day that riots erupted in Minneapolis Minnesota in the wake of the murder of George Floyd an African American from an incident involving four officers of the Minneapolis Police Department Trump had tweeted on his conversation with Minnesota s governor Tim Walz about bringing National Guard to stop the riots but concluded with the statement Any difficulty and we will assume control but when the looting starts the shooting starts a phrase attached to Miami Police Chief Walter E Headley to deal with violent riots in 1967 128 129 After internal review Twitter marked the message with a public interest notice that deemed it glorified violence which they would normally remove for violating the site s terms but stated to journalists that they have kept the Tweet on Twitter because it is important that the public still be able to see the Tweet given its relevance to ongoing matters of public importance 130 Following Twitter s marking of his May 28 tweet Trump said in another tweet that due to Twitter s actions Section 230 should be revoked by Congress Until then it will be regulated 131 By June 2 2020 the Center for Democracy amp Technology filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia seeking preliminary and permanent injunction from the EO from being enforced asserting that the EO created a chilling effect on free speech since it puts all hosts of third party content on notice that content moderation decisions with which the government disagrees could produce penalties and retributive actions including stripping them of Section 230 s protections 132 The Secretary of Commerce via the NTIA sent a petition with a proposed rule to the FCC on July 27 2020 as the first stage of executing the EO 133 134 FCC chair Ajit Pai stated in October 2020 that after the Commission reviewed what authority they have over Section 230 that the FCC will proceed with putting forth their proposed rules to clarify Section 230 on October 15 2020 135 Pai s announcement which came shortly after Trump again called for Section 230 revisions after asserting Big Tech was purposely hiding a reporting of leaked documents around Hunter Biden Joe Biden s son was criticized by the Democratic FCC commissioners Geoffrey Starks and Jessica Rosenworcel and the tech industry with Rosenworcel stating The FCC has no business being the president s speech police 136 137 A second lawsuit against the EO was filed by activist groups including Rock the Vote and Free Press on August 27 2020 after Twitter had flagged another of Trump s tweets for misinformation related to mail in voting fraud The lawsuit stated that should the EO be enforced Twitter would not have been able to fact check tweets like Trump s as misleading thus allowing the President or other government officials to intentionally distribute misinformation to citizens 138 President Biden rescinded the EO on May 14 2021 along with several of Trump s other orders 139 Subsequent events edit Following the November election Trump has made numerous claims on his social media accounts contesting the results including claims of fraud Twitter and other social media companies have marked these posts as potentially misleading similar to previous posts Trump has made As a result Trump threatened to veto the defense spending bill for 2021 if it did not contain language to repeal Section 230 140 Trump made good on his promise vetoing the spending bill on December 23 2020 in part for not containing a repeal of Section 230 141 The House voted to overturn the veto on December 28 322 87 sending the bill to the Senate to vote to overturn The Senate similarly voted to override the veto on January 1 2021 without adding any Section 230 provisions 142 During this Trump urged Congress to expand the COVID 19 relief payments in the Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021 that he had signed into law on December 27 2020 but also stated that they should address the Section 230 repeal and other matters that were not addressed in the defense bill The Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell stated on December 28 that he would bring legislation later that week that would include the expanded COVID 19 relief along with legislation to deal with Section 230 as outlined by Trump 143 Ultimately no additional legislation was introduced In the wake of the 2021 United States Capitol attack on January 6 2021 Pai stated that he would not be seeking any Section 230 reform before his prior planned resignation from office on January 20 2021 Pai stated that this was mostly due to the lack of time to implement such rule making before his resignation but also said that he would not second guess those decisions of social media networks under Section 230 to block some of Trump s messages from January 6 that contributed to the violence 144 In the days that followed Twitter Facebook and other social media services blocked or banned Trump s accounts claiming his speech during and after the riot was inciting further violence These actions were supported by politicians but led to renewed calls by Democratic leaders to reconsider Section 230 as these politicians believed that Section 230 led the companies to fail to take any preemptive action against the people who had planned and executed the Capitol riots 145 146 Separately Trump filed class action lawsuits against Twitter Facebook and YouTube in July 2021 related to his bans from the January 2021 period claiming their actions were unjustifiable and claiming that Section 230 was unconstitutional 147 Trump s lawsuit against Twitter was dismissed by a federal judge in May 2022 stating that the suit s First Amendment claims were inactionable against non government groups like Twitter though allowed an amended claim to be filed 148 In March 2021 Facebook s Mark Zuckerberg Alphabet s Sundar Pichai and Twitter s Jack Dorsey were asked to testify to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce relating to the role of social media in promoting extremism and misinformation following the 2020 election of which Section 230 was expected to be a topic Prior to the event Zuckerberg proposed an alternate change to Section 230 compared to previously proposed bills Zuckerberg stated that it would be costly and impractical for social media companies to traffic all problematic material and instead it would be better to tie Section 230 liability protection to companies that have demonstrated that they have mechanisms in place to remove this material once it is identified 149 In July 2021 Democratic senators Amy Klobuchar and Ben Ray Lujan introduced the Health Misinformation Act which is intended primarily to combat COVID 19 misinformation It would add a carveout to Section 230 to make companies liable for the publication of health misinformation during a public health emergency as established by the Department of Health and Human Services if the content is promoted to users via algorithmic decisions 150 Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act edit Following Frances Haugen s testimony to Congress that related to her whistleblowing on Facebook s internal handling of content House Democrats Anna Eshoo Frank Pallone Jr Mike Doyle and Jan Schakowsky introduced the Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act in October 2021 which is in committee as H R 5596 The bill would remove Section 230 protections for service providers related to personalized recommendation algorithms that present content to users if those algorithms knowingly or recklessly deliver content that contributes to physical or severe emotional injury 151 The last few years have proven that the more outrageous and extremist content social media platforms promote the more engagement and advertising dollars they rake in said Representative Frank Pallone Jr the chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee By now it s painfully clear that neither the market nor public pressure will stop social media companies from elevating disinformation and extremism so we have no choice but to legislate and now it s a question of how best to do it he added 152 State laws edit Florida edit See also Moody v NetChoice LLC The state of Florida predominantly Republican after the 2020 election passed its deplatforming Senate Bill 7072 in May 2021 which had been proposed in February 2021 after Trump had been banned from several social media sites SB 7072 prevents social media companies from knowingly blocking or banning politicians and grants the Florida Elections Commission the ability to fine these companies for knowing violations with fines as high as 250 000 per day for state level politicians The bill exempts companies that own theme parks or other large venues within the state thus would exempt companies such as Disney whose parks provide a significant tax revenue to the state 153 The Computer amp Communications Industry Association CCIA and NetChoice filed suit against the state to block enforcement of the law in Netchoice v Moody asserting that the law violated the First Amendment rights of private companies 154 Judge Robert Lewis Hinkle of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida issued a preliminary injunction against the law on June 30 2021 stating that The legislation now at issue was an effort to rein in social media providers deemed too large and too liberal Balancing the exchange of ideas among private speakers is not a legitimate governmental interest and further that the law discriminates on its face among otherwise identical speakers 155 Texas edit Main article Texas House Bill 20 See also Moody v NetChoice LLC Texas H B 20 enacted in September 2021 intended to prevent large social media providers from banning or demonetizing their users based on the user s viewpoint including for views expressed outside of the social media platform as well as to increase transparency in how these providers moderate content 156 The CCIA and NetChoice filed suit to prevent enforcement of the law in NetChoice v Paxton A federal district judge placed an injunction on this law in December 2021 stating that the law s prohibitions on censorship and constraints on how social media platforms disseminate content violate the First Amendment 157 However the Fifth Circuit reversed the injunction on a 2 1 order without yet ruling on the merits of the case in May 2022 effectively allowing the Texas law to come into effect 158 The CCIA and NetChoice appealed the Fifth Circuit decision directly to the U S Supreme Court seeking an emergency injunction to block the law They argued that regulations on how social media platforms moderate users content may prevent them from moderating at all in certain situations and thus force them to publish material they find objectionable an outcome that would violate the social media platforms First Amendment rights 159 On May 31 2022 the Supreme Court restored the injunction by court order with four Justices Samuel Alito Clarence Thomas Elena Kagan and Neil Gorsuch dissenting while lower court litigation continued 160 The Fifth Circuit reversed the district court ruling in September 2022 with Judge Andy Oldham stating in the majority opinion Today we reject the idea that corporations have a freewheeling First Amendment right to censor what people say 161 The decision creates a circuit split with the potential to be heard by the Supreme Court 161 The Fifth Circuit agreed to rejoin enforcement of the law in October 2022 while several tech companies petitioned the case to the Supreme Court 162 Both the Florida and the Texas law cases will be heard by the Supreme Court during its 2023 24 term 163 California edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2022 Case law editNumerous cases involving Section 230 have been heard in the judiciary system since its introduction many which are rote applications of Section 230 The following is a partial list of legal cases that have been established as case law that have influenced the interpretation of Section 230 in subsequent cases or have led to new legislation around Section 230 Defamatory information edit Zeran v AOL 129 F 3d 327 4th Cir 1997 164 Immunity was upheld against claims that AOL unreasonably delayed in removing defamatory messages posted by third party failed to post retractions and failed to screen for similar postings Blumenthal v Drudge 992 F Supp 44 49 53 D D C 1998 165 The court upheld AOL s immunity from liability for defamation AOL s agreement with the contractor allowing AOL to modify or remove such content did not make AOL the information content provider because the content was created by an independent contractor The Court noted that Congress made a policy choice by providing immunity even where the interactive service provider has an active even aggressive role in making available content prepared by others Carafano v Metrosplash com 339 F 3d 1119 9th Cir 2003 166 The court upheld immunity for an Internet dating service provider from liability stemming from third party s submission of a false profile The plaintiff Carafano claimed the false profile defamed her but because the content was created by a third party the website was immune even though it had provided multiple choice selections to aid profile creation Batzel v Smith 333 F 3d 1018 9th Cir 2003 167 Immunity was upheld for a website operator for distributing an email to a listserv where the plaintiff claimed the email was defamatory Though there was a question as to whether the information provider intended to send the email to the listserv the Court decided that for determining the liability of the service provider the focus should be not on the information provider s intentions or knowledge when transmitting content but instead on the service provider s or user s reasonable perception of those intentions or knowledge The Court found immunity proper under circumstances in which a reasonable person in the position of the service provider or user would conclude that the information was provided for publication on the Internet or other interactive computer service Green v AOL 318 F 3d 465 3rd Cir 2003 168 The court upheld immunity for AOL against allegations of negligence Green claimed AOL failed to adequately police its services and allowed third parties to defame him and inflict intentional emotional distress The court rejected these arguments because holding AOL negligent in promulgating harmful content would be equivalent to holding AOL liable for decisions relating to the monitoring screening and deletion of content from its network actions quintessentially related to a publisher s role Barrett v Rosenthal 40 Cal 4th 33 2006 169 Immunity was upheld for an individual internet user from liability for republication of defamatory statements on a listserv The court found the defendant to be a user of interactive computer services and thus immune from liability for posting information passed to her by the author MCW Inc v badbusinessbureau com RipOff Report Ed Magedson XCENTRIC Ventures LLC 2004 WL 833595 No Civ A 3 02 CV 2727 G N D Tex April 19 2004 170 The court rejected the defendant s motion to dismiss on the grounds of Section 230 immunity ruling that the plaintiff s allegations that the defendants wrote disparaging report titles and headings and themselves wrote disparaging editorial messages about the plaintiff rendered them information content providers The Web site www badbusinessbureau com allows users to upload reports containing complaints about businesses they have dealt with Hy Cite Corp v badbusinessbureau com RipOff Report Ed Magedson XCENTRIC Ventures LLC 418 F Supp 2d 1142 D Ariz 2005 171 The court rejected immunity and found the defendant was an information content provider under Section 230 using much of the same reasoning as the MCW case Barnes v Yahoo Inc 570 F 3d 1096 9th Cir 2009 The court rejected immunity for the defendant when failing to uphold a promissory estoppel claim related to third party content that they were otherwise immune from in this case Yahoo had promised to remove nude photos of the plaintiff placed maliciously on the site by an ex partner but had failed to do so While the Ninth Circuit ultimately dismissed the case since Yahoo would not have been liable for the photos under Section 230 their promissory estoppel makes them a publisher or speaker under Section 230 31 False information edit Gentry v eBay Inc 99 Cal App 4th 816 830 2002 172 eBay s immunity was upheld for claims based on forged autograph sports items purchased on the auction site Ben Ezra Weinstein amp Co v America Online 206 F 3d 980 984 985 10th Cir 2000 cert denied 531 U S 824 2000 173 Immunity for AOL was upheld against liability for a user s posting of incorrect stock information Goddard v Google Inc C 08 2738 JF PVT 2008 WL 5245490 2008 U S Dist LEXIS 101890 N D Cal December 17 2008 174 Immunity was upheld against claims of fraud and money laundering Google was not responsible for misleading advertising created by third parties who bought space on Google s pages The court found the creative pleading of money laundering did not cause the case to fall into the crime exception to Section 230 immunity Milgram v Orbitz Worldwide LLC ESX C 142 09 N J Super Ct August 26 2010 175 Immunity for Orbitz and CheapTickets was upheld for claims based on fraudulent ticket listings entered by third parties on ticket resale marketplaces Herrick v Grindr 765 F App x 586 2nd Cir 2019 The Second Circuit upheld immunity for the Grindr dating app for LGBT persons under Section 230 in regards to the misuse of false profiles created in the names of a real person The plaintiff had broken up with a boyfriend who later went onto Grindr to create multiple false profiles that presented the real life identity and address of the plaintiff and as being available for sexual encounters as well as having illegal drugs for sale The plaintiff reported that over a thousand men had come to his house for sex and drugs based on the communications with the fake profile and he began to fear for his safety He sued Grindr for not taking actions to block the false profiles after multiple requests Grindr asserted Section 230 did not make them liable for the actions of the ex boyfriend This was agreed by the district court and the Second Circuit 176 177 Sexually explicit content and minors edit Doe v America Online 783 So 2d 1010 1013 1017 Fl 2001 178 cert denied 122 S Ct 208 2000 The court upheld immunity against state claims of negligence based on chat room marketing of obscene photographs of minor by a third party Kathleen R v City of Livermore 87 Cal App 4th 684 692 2001 179 The California Court of Appeal upheld the immunity of a city from claims of waste of public funds nuisance premises liability and denial of substantive due process The plaintiff s child downloaded pornography from a public library s computers which did not restrict access to minors The court found the library was not responsible for the content of the internet and explicitly found that section 230 c 1 immunity covers governmental entities and taxpayer causes of action Doe v MySpace 528 F 3d 413 5th Cir 2008 180 The court upheld immunity for a social networking site from negligence and gross negligence liability for failing to institute safety measures to protect minors and failure to institute policies relating to age verification The Does daughter had lied about her age and communicated over MySpace with a man who later sexually assaulted her In the court s view the Does allegations were merely another way of claiming that MySpace was liable for publishing the communications Dart v Craigslist Inc 665 F Supp 2d 961 N D Ill October 20 2009 181 The court upheld immunity for Craigslist against a county sheriff s claims that its erotic services section constituted a public nuisance because it caused or induced prostitution Backpage com v McKenna et al CASE NO C12 954 RSM 182 Backpage com LLC v Cooper Case 12 cv 00654 SS1 183 Backpage com LLC v Hoffman et al Civil Action No 13 cv 03952 DMC JAD 184 The court upheld immunity for Backpage in contesting a Washington state law SB6251 185 that would have made providers of third party content online liable for any crimes related to a minor in Washington state 186 The states of Tennessee and New Jersey later passed similar legislation Backpage argued that the laws violated Section 230 the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution and the First and Fifth Amendments 185 In all three cases the courts granted Backpage permanent injunctive relief and awarded them attorney s fees 183 187 188 189 190 Backpage com v Dart CASE NO 15 3047 191 The court ruled in favor of Backpage after Sheriff Tom Dart of Cook County Illinois a frequent critic of Backpage and its adult postings section sent a letter on his official stationery to Visa and MasterCard demanding that these firms immediately cease and desist allowing the use of their credit cards to purchase ads on Backpage Within two days both companies withdrew their services from Backpage 192 Backpage filed a lawsuit asking for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against Dart granting Backpage relief and return to the status quo prior to Dart sending the letter Backpage alleged that Dart s actions were unconstitutional violating the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the US Constitution as well as Section 230 of the CDA Backpage asked for Dart to retract his cease and desist letters 193 After initially being denied the injunctive relief by a lower court 194 195 the Seventh Circuit U S Court of Appeals reversed that decision and directed that a permanent injunction be issued enjoining Dart and his office from taking any actions to coerce or threaten credit card companies with sanctions intended to ban credit card or other financial services from being provided to Backpage com 196 The court cited Section 230 as part of its decision and the Supreme Court declined to hear the petition to this case However this decision in part led to the passage of the FOSTA SESTA Acts and subsequently the dismissal of Backpage s case after federal enforcement agencies had seized Backpage s assets for violating FOSTA SESTA 197 Discriminatory housing ads edit Chicago Lawyers Committee For Civil Rights Under Law Inc v Craigslist Inc 519 F 3d 666 7th Cir 2008 198 The court upheld immunity for Craigslist against Fair Housing Act claims based on discriminatory statements in postings on the classifieds website by third party users Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley v Roommates com LLC 521 F 3d 1157 9th Cir 2008 en banc 199 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected immunity for the Roommates com roommate matching service for discrimination claims brought under the federal Fair Housing Act 200 and California housing discrimination laws 201 The court concluded that the manner in which the service elicited required information from users concerning their roommate preferences by having dropdowns specifying gender presence of children and sexual orientation and the manner in which it utilized that information in generating roommate matches by eliminating profiles that did not match user specifications that the service was an information content provider and thus liable for the discrimination claims The court upheld immunity for the descriptions posted by users in the Additional Comments section because these were entirely created by users 31 Threats edit Delfino v Agilent Technologies 145 Cal App 4th 790 2006 cert denied 128 S Ct 98 2007 A California Appellate Court unanimously upheld immunity from state tort claims arising from an employee s use of the employer s e mail system to send threatening messages The court concluded that an employer that provides Internet access to its employees qualifies as a provider of an interactive service Failure to warn edit Jane Doe No 14 v Internet Brands Inc No 12 56638 9th Cir September 17 2014 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected immunity for claims of negligence under California law Doe filed a complaint against Internet Brands which alleged a failure to warn her of a known rape scheme despite her relationship to them as a ModelMayhem com member They also had requisite knowledge to avoid future victimization of ModelMayhem com users by warning users of online sexual predators The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the Communications Decency Act did not bar the claim and remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings In February 2015 the Ninth Circuit panel set aside its 2014 opinion and set the case for reargument In May 2016 the panel again held that Doe s case could proceed 202 203 Terrorism edit Force v Facebook Inc 934 F 3d 53 2nd Cir 2019 The Second Circuit upheld immunity in civil claims for service providers for hosting terrorism related content created by users Families friends and associates of several killed in Hamas attacks filed suit against Facebook under the United States Anti Terrorism Act asserting that since Hamas members used Facebook to coordinate activities Facebook was liable for its content While previous rules at federal District and Circuit level have generally ruled against such cases this decision in the Second Circuit was first to assert that Section 230 does apply even to acts related to terrorism that may be posted by users of service providers thus dismissing the suit against Facebook The Second Circuit ruled that the various algorithms Facebook for its recommender system remain as part of the role of the distributor of the content and not the publisher since these automated tools were essentially neutral 84 The Supreme Court declined to hear the case 204 Judge Robert Katzman gave a 35 page dissenting opinion in the Force case which was cited by Justice Clarence Thomas in a suggestion to colleagues in 2020 to reconsider the scope of immunity granted under Section 230 152 Gonzalez v Google LLC 2023 and Twitter Inc v Taamneh 2023 Both cases were ruled on by the Supreme Court in May 2023 In Gonzalez YouTube via Google was accused of aiding terrorism by its recommendation algorithm for which Google claimed immunity via Section 230 205 In Twitter Twitter and other social media companies were argued to have assisted in terrorist activity under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 amended by the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act Twitter tried to argue for Section 230 immunity but this was not considered in lower courts 87 in the Supreme Court decision for Twitter the unanimous court ruled that there were no actionable charges against Twitter under the Antiterrorism Act the plaintiff family failed to state a claim for relief Subsequently the Gonzalez case was returned by per curium order to lower courts to review the case in light of the Twitter decision These decisions effectively avoided raising any questions in Section 230 206 Similar legislation in other countries editEuropean Union edit Directive 2000 31 EC 207 the e Commerce Directive establishes a safe harbor regime for hosting providers Article 14 establishes that hosting providers are not responsible for the content they host as long as 1 the acts in question are neutral intermediary acts of a mere technical automatic and passive capacity 2 they are not informed of its illegal character and 3 they act promptly to remove or disable access to the material when informed of it Article 15 precludes member states from imposing general obligations to monitor hosted content for potential illegal activities The updated Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market Directive 2019 790 Article 17 makes providers liable if they fail to take effective and proportionate measures to prevent users from uploading certain copyright violations and do not respond immediately to takedown requests 208 Australia edit In Dow Jones amp Company Inc v Gutnick 209 the High Court of Australia treated defamatory material on a server outside Australia as having been published in Australia when it is downloaded or read by someone in Australia Gorton v Australian Broadcasting Commission amp Anor 1973 1 ACTR 6Under the Defamation Act 2005 NSW 210 s 32 a defence to defamation is that the defendant neither knew nor ought reasonably to have known of the defamation and the lack of knowledge was not due to the defendant s negligence Italy edit The Electronic Commerce Directive 2000 207 e Commerce Directive has been implemented in Italy by means of Legislative Decree no 70 of 2003 The provisions provided by Italy are substantially in line with those provided at the EU level However at the beginning the Italian case law had drawn a line between so called active hosting providers and passive Internet Service Providers arguing that active Internet Service Providers would not benefit from the liability exception provided by Legislative Decree no 70 According to that case law an ISP is deemed to be active whenever it carries out operations on the content provided by the user such as in case it modifies the content or makes any enrichment of the content Under certain cases courts have held ISPs liable for the user s content for the mere facts that such content was somehow organised or enriched by the ISP e g by organizing the contents in libraries or categories etc or monetised by showing ads New Zealand edit Failing to investigate the material or to make inquiries of the user concerned may amount to negligence in this context Jensen v Clark 1982 2 NZLR 268 France edit Directive 2000 31 CE was transposed into the LCEN law Article 6 of the law establishes safe haven for hosting provider as long as they follow certain rules In LICRA vs Yahoo the High Court ordered Yahoo to take affirmative steps to filter out Nazi memorabilia from its auction site Yahoo Inc and its then president Timothy Koogle were also criminally charged but acquitted Germany edit In 1997 Felix Somm the former managing director for CompuServe Germany was charged with violating German child pornography laws because of the material CompuServe s network was carrying into Germany He was convicted and sentenced to two years probation on May 28 1998 211 212 He was cleared on appeal on November 17 1999 213 214 The Oberlandesgericht OLG Cologne an appellate court found that an online auctioneer does not have an active duty to check for counterfeit goods Az 6 U 12 01 215 In one example the first instance district court of Hamburg issued a temporary restraining order requiring message board operator Universal Boards to review all comments before they can be posted to prevent the publication of messages inciting others to download harmful files The court reasoned that the publishing house must be held liable for spreading such material in the forum regardless of whether it was aware of the content 216 United Kingdom edit See also Defamation Act 2013 The laws of libel and defamation will treat a disseminator of information as having published material posted by a user and the onus will then be on a defendant to prove that it did not know the publication was defamatory and was not negligent in failing to know Goldsmith v Sperrings Ltd 1977 2 All ER 566 Vizetelly v Mudie s Select Library Ltd 1900 2 QB 170 Emmens v Pottle amp Ors 1885 16 QBD 354 In an action against a website operator on a statement posted on the website it is a defence to show that it was not the operator who posted the statement on the website The defence is defeated if it was not possible for the claimant to identify the person who posted the statement or the claimant gave the operator a notice of complaint and the operator failed to respond in accordance with regulations See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Law portal nbsp Internet portalCollateral censorshipNotes edit Section 230 is commonly mislabeled as Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act It was the ninth section of the Communications Decency Act and the 509th section of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 formally Section 230 is an amendment to the 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March 12 2009 heise online IT News Nachrichten und Hintergrunde heise online Archived from the original on October 22 2008 Bibliography edit Kosseff Jeff 2019 The Twenty Six Words That Created the Internet Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1501735783 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctvr7fcrd 47 U S C 230 Margaret Jane Radin et al Internet Commerce The Emerging Legal Framework 1091 1136 2nd ed 2006 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 12 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Article 17 1 2 U S reservations declarations and understandings International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 138 Cong Rec S4781 01 daily ed April 2 1992 Section II 5 Further reading editRoberts Jeff John December 2019 Tech s Legal Shield Tussle Fortune Paper New York City pp 33 34 ISSN 0015 8259 External links edit nbsp Works related to Section 230 and the Communications Decency Act of 1996 at Wikisource Full text of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 Citizen Media Law Project s primer on Section 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