Conservatives’ whining about a liberal bias in social media strikes me as hypocritical. When Fox et al receive criticism about a conservative bias, defenders rally around the First Amendment and libertarianism. Fox can be as biased and censorious as it wants to be. Fox can serve as a conduit for Russian disinformation so long as the company does not act maliciously, or grossly negligent. Fox can target, vilify and disparage. The New York Post can come up with a questionable “October Surprise,” clearly intending to help re-elect President Trump.
These very same First Amendment advocates expect social networks like Facebook and Twitter to serve as neutral conduits, without any “right” to censor, curate or manage uploaded content from subscribers. Really? Conservatives loath efforts by a Democrat-led Federal Communications Commission to impose “network neutrality” obligations on Internet Service Providers. The Republican majority at the FCC championed deregulation as “Restoring Internet Freedom.”
Now, conservatives want to impose a fairness mandate on social networks who apparently have no First Amendment rights in curating, filtering and algorithmic monitoring. Settled “SUPER PRECEDENT” recognizes a First Amendment right to curate, filter and monitor content. Librarians do that, so do web-based news aggregators and surely Fox, the New York Post and yes, the New York Times as well, do that when they deviate from a commitment to best practices in journalism. Additionally, a nonpartisan majority provided web carriers and content distributors significant immunity from liability when providing a conduit for harmful content. This “safe harbor” helped incubate the Internet, particularly when it was technologically infeasible to monitor the torrent of traffic.
In prior blog entries, I have noted that algorithms make mistakes, including the refusal to issue me a credit card in light of my “insufficient credit experience.” I will readily acknowledge that the algorithms and staff assessments of social networks may overshoot, or undershoot the mark in curation.
I will never accept the view—conservative or liberal—that ISPs, social networks and telecommunications networks have to assess the political consequences of allowing, or blocking specific content. Do we really want a regulator or judge to second guess decisions made to allow or block content without allowing the conduit operator to assess the veracity and compliance with the terms of service?
Have conservatives lost respect for the “sanctity of contract”? Do they really think the Constitution supports revocation of social networks’ management of the content they disseminate?
Chilling.