Former FEC Chair Calls For Crackdown on Internet “Disinformation” In Major Threat To Free Speech

In addition to new rules on paid ads, Ravel wants fake news to be regulated under her proposal titled Fool Me Once: The Case for Government Regulation of ‘Fake News.” If adopted, a “social media user” would be flagged for sharing anything deemed false by regulators:

“after a social media user clicks ‘share’ on a disputed item (if the platforms do not remove them and only label them as disputed), government can require that the user be reminded of the definition of libel against a public figure. Libel of public figures requires ‘actual malice,’ defined as knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth. Sharing an item that has been flagged as untrue might trigger liability under libel laws.”

Without clearly defining “disinformation,” Ravel would give bureaucrats the power to label postings as false and harass those who share such information.  Of course, this would also involve a massive databanks of collections ads and discussions by the government.

The authors of the proposal see greater government regulation as the solution to what they describe as “informational deficits” in the largely free exchanges of the Internet.  There is a far dosage of doublespeak in the article.  Rather than refer to the new regulation as guaranteeing greater government control, the authors insist that “government regulations . . .  improve transparency.” Rather than talk of government controls over speech, the authors talk about the government “nudging” otherwise ignorant readers and commentators.  Here is the worrisome section:

Government regulations to help voters avoid spreading disinformation

Educate social media users. Social media users can unintentionally spread disinformation when they interact with it in their newsfeeds. Depending on their security settings, their entire online social network can see items that they interact with (by “liking” or commenting), even if they are expressing their opposition to the content. Social media users should not interact with disinformation in their feeds at all (aside from flagging it for review by third party fact checkers). Government should require platforms to regularly remind social media users about not interacting with disinformation.

Similarly, after a social media user clicks “share” on a disputed item (if the platforms do not remove them and only label them as disputed), government can require that the user be reminded of the definition of libel against a public figure. Libel of public figures requires “actual malice”, defined as knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth. Sharing an item that has been flagged as untrue might trigger liability under libel laws.

Nudge social media users to not view disputed content. Lawmakers should require platforms to provide an opt-in (or, more weakly, opt-out) system for viewing disputed content and periodically remind users of their options. We think the courts should uphold this as a constitutional regulation of political speech, but we acknowledge that it is a closer question than the more straightforward disclosure regulations above. The most analogous cases are to commercial speech cases (AdChoices and Do Not Call Registry, which was upheld). Commercial speech receives less protection than political speech.

I have been writing about the threat to free speech coming increasingly from the left, including Democratic politicians.  The implications of such controls are being dismissed in the pursuit of new specters of “fake news” or “microaggressions” or “disinformation.”  The result has been a comprehensive assault on free speech from college campuses to the Internet to social media.  What is particularly worrisome is the targeting of the Internet, which remains the single greatest advancement of free speech of our generation.  Not surprisingly, governments see the Internet as a threat while others seeks to control its message.

What Ravel and her co-authors are suggesting is a need to label certain views as “false” while giving not-so-subtle threats of legal action for those who share such information.  Once the non-threatening language of “nudges” and “transparency” are stripped away, the proposal’s true meaning is laid bare as a potentially radical change in government regulation over free speech and association.

 

What do you think?

71 thoughts on “Former FEC Chair Calls For Crackdown on Internet “Disinformation” In Major Threat To Free Speech”

  1. As with the fake trump presidency which was accomplished through disinformation, media obsession, Russian meddling, FBI involvement and GOP voter suppression laws, fake news should just have an asterisk next to it.

    Most people, especially those living in the fantasy world of trumpistan, don’t have the wherewithal to determine what is fake and what is real. After all they believe in Pizzagate, alien lizards, contrails cause gayness, the Illuminati, trump won by 3 million votes, Sandy Hook is a false flag, Jade Helm was a planned invasion of the US military into TX, trump is smarter than his generals, trump will give everyone health ins at lower cost, trump will bring back jobs from China, trump u was a fine institution, trump is not a racist, locker room talk, and Obama is a Kenyan Muslim to name but a few of their distorted, delusional fantasies. trumpster minds are the fertile soil ready and absorbing the planting of the Big Lies which will lead to the end of democracy anyway.

    1. If fantasy helps you feel better, I suppose it’s harmless enough as you’re not likely to persuade anyone to share it. You might refrain from making a pest of yourself to the normies.

  2. To the James Brown of CBS. CBS anchor Otis Livingston that I met told me scary story he had secret sexual relation with Brown’s wife, Otis Livingston also wants to kill Brown’s wife if she will open her mouth. becareful of Otis Livingston he is nothing but crime!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  3. The former FEC chair is either blindly ignorant or hard at work on boiling a frog. I can’t imagine she believes labeling an item “disputed” is going to send Facebook users fleeing; if anything, they’ll be drawn in by her tut-tutting. What makes me laugh is the flowerly language — “informational deficit” is even fuzzier than “collateral damage” — attached to a fairly blatant power grab.

Comments are closed.

Res ipsa loquitur – The thing itself speaks

Discover more from JONATHAN TURLEY

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading