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This is simply wrong. It would mean platforms that don’t moderate have no liability. The law was created because a website that didn’t moderate was found to be not liable for the comments it’s users posted, and a website that did was found to be liable. This is even on the Wikipedia page for section 230.

I guess the conclusion that repealing it would result in more censorship is based on the idea that platforms would moderate more aggressively to try and avoid all liability. When really, that’s simple not possible, and they would have to abandon the practice all together. Well, the larger platforms would have to at least.



> When really, that’s simple not possible, and they would have to abandon the practice all together.

Can't do that, it'll hurt the bottomline. Most users aren't keen on using platforms filled with spam, porn, trolls, and hate speech. And if you don't believe this, ask yourself why a lot of these sites don't allow porn, spam, trolls, or hate speech right now. It's partly moral, but mostly because it's bad for business.

Stricter moderation will be the more likely outcome, and we'll have even less free speech than we have now.


They wouldn’t have to stop moderating. Some assholes would sue them and the courts would have to decide how the 1A handles such things.


It creates an incentive to improve moderation automation and reduce moderation costs. One way to do that is to verify users, which will help with our sock puppet and deliberate misinformation problems.


If you are concerned about the chilling effect of sites arbitrarily moderating user-generated content they find objectionable, just think about how much worse identity verification would be. Here on HN, people regularly create throwaway accounts so they can provide valuable insider accounts of things happening at companies where they work; that would never happen if they had to prove their identities first.

In fact, Twitter already does verify users for some accounts—that’s where the blue checks come from—and many of them are the most profligate misinformation peddlers. I think Twitter also requires new users to register with a phone number, and Google+ and Facebook both had/have real name policies, and none of that has done a thing to stem the flood of misinformation online.


Sure it could happen. The identity verification needn’t be public.

Facebook et al have no real barrier to fake accounts.


Automated moderation can’t possibly solve that problem. How do you automatically moderate libel?


It’s a problem Facebook is working on. Presumably signals like user reporting but yes, it’s not easy. If someone figures it out, they’ll make a lot of money.




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