Posted on 12/18/2015 9:46:32 AM PST by jacknhoo
If this were a joke, it would have to start out: âSo, three censors walk into a barâ¦.â
Except that itâs no joking matter when the trio calling for private or public censoring of the Internet include the two leading candidates (at this moment) for leader of the Free World, and the head of the largest search engine and information company on the planet.
The free flow of information and communication of ideas â even repugnant ones â is a hallmark of American democracy. Even âhate speechâ has constitutional protection when it offends, insults or attacks. Only when speakers cross over into use of so-called âfighting words,â or make true threats, which must be realistic, intentional and likely to produce imminent harm, does criminal law apply.
The U.S. Supreme Court has a long string of decisions defending speech and speakers that many Americans would like to shut off or shut down, from racist remarks to the hateful messages of a self-proclaimed Kansas church which parades at the funerals of U.S. military.
Yet, within a just a few days of each other:
â Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google, said in an Op-ed piece for the New York Times that in order to fight ISIS and similar terrorist groupsâ use of the Internet, his company and others should create algorithmic âtools to help de-escalate tensions on social mediaâsort of like spell-checkers, but for hate and harassment.â
â Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton called on Web companies to âdisruptâ terror groupsâ ability to use social media for recruitment and communication, to âdeprive jihadists of virtual territoryâ by shutting off their means of communication in the manner a U.S.-led coalition is attempting to retake actual land in the Mideast.
â GOP poll leader Donald Trump said at a South Carolina rally that âin certain areas,â we should just shut down the Internet. âWe have to see Bill Gates and a lot of different people that really understand whatâs happening,â he said. âWe have to talk to them about, maybe in certain areas, closing that internet up in some ways. â
Both Clinton and Trump took clear aim at the First Amendment. Trump said, âSomebody will say, âOh freedom of speech, freedom of speech.â These are foolish people.â And Clinton told a group of Web company representatives that âyouâll hear all the usual complaintsâfreedom of speech. But if we truly are in a war against terrorism and we are truly looking for ways to shut off their funding and shut off the flow of foreign fighters, we have to shut off their means of communicating.â
But as FBI director James B. Comey said in a program Wednesday night at the Newseum, the old model of a Web site âwatering holeâ where terror operations and communications were centralized is gone â replaced by a world-wide, diverse set of points of contact and communication that defy simple counter-terrorist moves.
Schmidt may be on better legal ground with his robotic-powered battle plan, since the First Amendment protects only against government censorship, not the decisions of private companies. Already, in response to ISIS posts involving savage violence and the beheadings in 2014 of American journalists and others, social media outlets such as Facebook, Google, and Twitter have moved to quickly take down such posts as quickly as they are spotted.
But should the Google chiefâs plan gains any traction, it surely will revive talk of bringing such massively powerful private information companies under the First Amendment â and thus, their content decisions â as quasi-governmental entities, much as we view electric, water and other public utilities.
Yet another Web battleground revolves around the use of encryption â tools that prevent most or all outside parties from deciphering material sent via the e-mail or social media. But while advocates of controlling or limiting terroristsâ communications call for providing governments with âback-doorâ tools to secretly spy on such messages, others say providing such access ability simply provides a means for skilled terrorists to undermine Web security.
Advocates for a free press note that creating such entry points for surveillance also makes it possible for governments at home and abroad to monitor the work of journalists, identify news source and such â effectively blunting the watchdog role of the press, particularly on national security matters.
And what of those organizing in other nations and against repressive regimes where identification means imprisonment, and an a government encryption âback-doorâ can lead in short order to a gallowsâ âtrap door.â
Terror groups can simply operate in the open â as did the San Bernardino killers recently â by sending pre-arranged, apparently innocent messages. And a major U.S.-led effort to censor messages it sees as harmful certainly could be cited by repressive regimes around the world to clamp down on free speech and free press for political reasons â a kind of âIf they do it, with their First Amendment, we can tooâ argument.
None of this is to say the U.S. or other nations cannot build internet-related mechanisms to combat direct and immediate threats â but such efforts should focus on incidents where evidence has been presented in courts, and be held under law to the least-intrusive restriction on free speech.
Trumpâs bombastic ridicule of âfoolish people,â Clintonâs call for private companies to act as de facto government censors, and Schmidtâs scary proposal for a robotic ânational speech nannyâ are too much, too far, and would gain too little.
The bringing about of real, proximate harm via Web site or social media messages â coordinating a terror attack or bombing â are one thing. But the effective antidote to ISIS propaganda is to use the same Web and social media tools to both discredit the bogus material and to spread positive news.
At various times during the War on Terror, government officials in various administrations have justified calls for national security-based restrictions on press and speech by quoting Justice Jacksonâs 1949 comment, âthe Constitutionâs Bill of Rights is not a suicide pact.â
But thatâs no excuse for anyone â including Schmidt, Clinton and Trump â to do great harm to free speech, one of the essentials that make an American life worth living.
Gene Policinski is chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and senior vice president of the Instituteâs First Amendment Center.
Email: gpolicinski@newseum.org Twitter: @genefac
Why do quotes and apostrophes display correct on the “latest articles” page where it displays the first paragraph, but not when you go to read the article? That’s strange.
Just another Trump hit piece. WE ARE AT WAR! Anybody remember WWII when EVERY MEANS of combating spies and 5th column communication was used?
This is a real concern. It’s much more complex than a simple sound-bite. The article does a reasonable job of giving an overview of the issues involved, but only an overview.
Source: Newseum. Which, I learned afterward, was not far at all from where we were demonstrating, in DC back in November of 2009. Had I known that, I would have taken my sign there and picketed the place.My sign said, “Think Outside ‘the Wire’ -
AP”
Loose lips sink ships !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:-)
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By this "logic", we should also shut down all cell phone towers, take down all hard line phones, and shut down the US postal service as well. Talking may have to be banned as well.
Morons.
You’d better believe it. Great post. Too bad too many don’t have a clue what it means.
By this “logic”, we should also shut down all cell phone towers, take down all hard line phones, and shut down the US postal service as well. Talking may have to be banned as well.
Morons.
............................................................
Typical overreaction to COMMON SENSE proposals. Some people are simply reactionaries. IDIOTS.
And today, the Democrats consider Republicans a greater threat than the people who’ve declared war on the West and regularly kill people.
It even took France both the Charley Hebdo massacre (and lesser attack on a Jewish deli) and massive attack in November to actually act and crack down on Islamo-fascists.
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