Justice Department will reportedly propose limits to online platforms' legal protections [View all]
This is speculative, which keeps it from LBN.
Hat tip, Joe.My.God.
DOJ Will Seek To Roll Back Protections For Social Media
June 17, 2020
CNET
reports:
The Justice Department will propose rolling back the legal protections online platforms have had since the 90s, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday, to make sites more vigilant about policing content. It follows President Donald Trumps executive order targeting social media companies.
The proposal could be announced on Wednesday, reported the Journal, citing a Trump administration official. The presidents order, which came in late May, called for a government review into Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which protects online companies from liability for content posted by users.
The DOJ proposal would erode legal protections afforded to social media companies under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which was passed in 1996, according to the Journal. Section 230 is considered the most important law protecting free speech online.
The original WSJ report is behind their paywall. All of this is the result, of course, of Trumps furor at having one of his tweets tagged with a link to the facts about voting by mail and having another of his tweets hidden for glorifying violence.
Justice Department will reportedly propose limits to online platforms' legal protections
This comes in the wake of President Donald Trump's executive order targeting social media sites.
Sean Keane | June 17, 2020 5:27 a.m. PT
The Justice Department will propose rolling back legal protections that online platforms have had since the 1990s and try to make sites more vigilant about policing content, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. This follows President Donald Trump's executive order targeting social media companies.
The proposal could be announced Wednesday, reported the Journal, citing a Trump administration official. The president's order, which came in late May, called for a government review into Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which protects online companies from liability for content posted by users.
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