IPcentral Weblog
  The DACA Blog

Thursday, May 14, 2009

 
Emerging Threats to Section 230
(previous | next)
 

As faithful readers no doubt know, I'm a big fan of Section 230 and believe it has been the foundation of a great many of the online freedoms we enjoy (dare I say, take for granted?) today. That's why I'm increasingly concerned about some of the emerging thinking and case law I am seeing on this front, which takes a decidedly anti-230 tone.

Consider, for example, how some might weaken Sec. 230 in the name of "child safety." You will recall the friendly debate about the future of Sec. 230 that I engaged in with Harvard's John Palfrey. Prof. Palfrey has argued that: "The scope of the immunity the CDA provides for online service providers is too broad" and that the law "should not preclude parents from bringing a claim of negligence against [a social networking site] for failing to protect the safety of its users." Similarly, Andrew LaVallee of The Wall Street Journal reported from a conference this week that Sec. 230 became everyone's favorite whipping boy, with several participants suggesting that the law needs to be re-opened and altered to somehow solve online "cyber-bullying" problems.

There's also some potential trouble brewing in the courts, as Braden Cox noted recently. As usual, the prolific Eric Goldman has the best summary of what's been going on over at his Technology & Marketing Law Blog. After Eric's takes a close look at the most recent 230-related case of Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc., which contained some troubling language about 230, he continues on to note:

47 USC 230 has weathered plaintiff attacks very well in the past dozen years, but the last 6 months have opened up a number of angles for plaintiffs to explore. Consider the track record:

* Woodhull (October): soliciting and publishing a defamatory third party email wasn't covered by 230
* Doe v. SexSearch (December): as mentioned, the court stepped back from saying 230 preempted liability for marketing representations
* StubHub (January): interference with business claim wasn't preempted by 230
* Gourlay (March): web host who provided extra commercial services to its customer couldn't claim 230
* Project Playlist (March): 230 doesn't preempt state IP claims (this is a loss only because it contravenes the wrongly decided Ninth Circuit ccBill case, which was more defense-favorable).
* This case, saying that a promissory estoppel claim isn't preempted by 230.

I'm not sure what to make of this trend, but it's clear that we're finally finding some substantial limits in 230's reach, and that's creating new litigation opportunities for plaintiffs.


And let's be clear about why these trends are so troubling. Keeping online intermediaries free from burdensome policing requirements and liability threats has created the vibrant marketplace of expression and commerce that we enjoy today. If not for Sec. 230, we would likely live in a very different world today. The alternative approach of strict secondary liability on ISPs and other online intermediaries would have a profound "chilling effect" on online free speech and expression. That's why Sec. 230 is so important, and worth defending.

posted by Adam Thierer @ 7:25 PM | Free Speech

Share |

Link to this Entry | Printer-Friendly

Comments

There is no requirement that the webmasters or site owners keep information about who made the libelous statements or help find them. Blog Host

Posted by: Blog Host at May 15, 2009 5:26 PM

Post a Comment:





 
Blog Main
RSS Feed  
Recent Posts
  EFF-PFF Amicus Brief in Schwarzenegger v. EMA Supreme Court Videogame Violence Case
New OECD Study Finds That Improved IPR Protections Benefit Developing Countries
Hubris, Cowardice, File-sharing, and TechDirt
iPhones, DRM, and Doom-Mongers
"Rogue Archivist" Carl Malamud On How to Fix Gov2.0
Coping with Information Overload: Thoughts on Hamlet's BlackBerry by William Powers
How Many Times Has Michael "Dr. Doom" Copps Forecast an Internet Apocalypse?
Google / Verizon Proposal May Be Important Compromise, But Regulatory Trajectory Concerns Many
Two Schools of Internet Pessimism
GAO: Wireless Prices Plummeting; Public Knowledge: We Must Regulate!
Archives by Month
  September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
  - (see all)
Archives by Topic
  - A La Carte
- Add category
- Advertising & Marketing
- Antitrust & Competition Policy
- Appleplectics
- Books & Book Reviews
- Broadband
- Cable
- Campaign Finance Law
- Capitalism
- Capitol Hill
- China
- Commons
- Communications
- Copyright
- Cutting the Video Cord
- Cyber-Security
- DACA
- Digital Americas
- Digital Europe
- Digital Europe 2006
- Digital TV
- E-commerce
- e-Government & Transparency
- Economics
- Education
- Electricity
- Energy
- Events
- Exaflood
- Free Speech
- Gambling
- General
- Generic Rant
- Global Innovation
- Googlephobia
- Googlephobia
- Human Capital
- Innovation
- Intermediary Deputization & Section 230
- Internet
- Internet Governance
- Internet TV
- Interoperability
- IP
- Local Franchising
- Mass Media
- Media Regulation
- Monetary Policy
- Municipal Ownership
- Net Neutrality
- Neutrality
- Non-PFF Podcasts
- Ongoing Series
- Online Safety & Parental Controls
- Open Source
- PFF
- PFF Podcasts
- Philosophy / Cyber-Libertarianism
- Privacy
- Privacy Solutions
- Regulation
- Search
- Security
- Software
- Space
- Spectrum
- Sports
- State Policy
- Supreme Court
- Taxes
- The FCC
- The FTC
- The News Frontier
- Think Tanks
- Trade
- Trademark
- Universal Service
- Video Games & Virtual Worlds
- VoIP
- What We're Reading
- Wireless
- Wireline
Archives by Author
PFF Blogosphere Archives
We welcome comments by email - look for a link to the author's email address in the byline of each post. Please let us know if we may publish your remarks.
 










The Progress & Freedom Foundation