Donald Trump Doesn’t Think ‘the Mainstream Media Is Free Speech’

The threat of platform censorship took center stage Thursday at the White House’s “social media summit,” where President Donald Trump addressed a friendly crowd of conservative internet figures who are concerned about Big Tech policing their speech.

Whether private companies treat conservatives unfairly is not a free speech issue in the First Amendment sense, since only the government is constitutionally prohibited from engaging in censorship. Trump, on the other hand, made some remarks that were at least an implicit threat to freedom of speech. About 46 minutes after taking the podium, the president said this:

We don’t want to stifle anything. We certainly don’t want to stifle free speech, but that’s no longer free speech. I don’t think that the mainstream media is free speech, because it’s so crooked, it’s dishonest. Free speech is not when you see something good and then you purposely write bad, to me that’s very dangerous speech, and you become angry at it, but it’s not free speech.

The statement is not completely coherent, but Trump appears to be asserting that speech loses constitutional protection when it’s “crooked” or “dishonest.” Now, it’s true that objectively false and disparaging speech can in some cases be deemed libelous. But speech that merely strikes Trump as “bad” does not lose its First Amendment protection.

The false claim that “bad” speech is “dangerous” and thus unprotected by the Bill of Rights is not fundamentally different from the equally false claim that hate speech is not free speech. Conservatives—including many of the conservatives in the audience yesterday—often mock campus progressives for making the latter claim. For the sake of intellectual consistency, one might hope that they would also object to the former claim, and thus be willing to call out Trump. Trump, after all, is president of the United States, and in that capacity has much more power to violate the First Amendment than any social justice warriors or social media CEOs do.

For more on anti-speech trends on the left and the right, check out my new book, Panic Attack: Young Radicals in the Age of Trumpwhich was recently featured on The View‘s summer reading list episode.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2XHW3H4
via IFTTT

Trump’s Census Surrender Hints at the Real Reason He Tried to Add a Citizenship Question

Donald Trump’s census surrender, which represents the third time the administration has changed its plans regarding a citizenship question since the Supreme Court ruled against it two weeks ago, was weird even by the standards of an erratic and mercurial president who governs by tweet, often surprising his own underlings. The reason that Attorney General William Barr gave for backing down (for real this time, maybe)—that the administration would ultimately prevail, but not in time to keep the census on schedule—is no more obvious today than it was on June 27. But Trump’s remarks did provide a clue to the real reason (as opposed to the “contrived” and “pretextual” one rejected by the Court) why Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross decided, shortly after taking office in February 2017, that the 2020 census should ask U.S. residents about their legal status.

Trump said he was ordering the Census Bureau to mine citizenship data from other agencies’ administrative records—something the bureau was already doing, although Ross had officially deemed it an unsatisfactory alternative to directly asking about citizenship in the census. “Knowing this information is vital to formulating sound public policy, whether the issue is healthcare, education, civil rights, or immigration,” the president said. But later he added: “This information is also relevant to administering our elections. Some states may want to draw state and local legislative districts based upon the voter-eligible population.”

The 14th Amendment says “representatives shall be apportioned among the several states according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each state, excluding Indians not taxed.” That rule, however, applies to Congress, not to state and local legislatures. The Supreme Court has not resolved the issue of whether drawing state and local legislative districts based on eligible voters rather than all residents is consistent with equal protection and the “one person, one vote” principle. But it arguably is, which is why the late Republican gerrymandering whiz Thomas Hofeller, who was in touch with Trump’s transition team, was so keen on the idea of obtaining better citizenship data.

As Matt Welch noted here in May, Hofeller concluded that redrawing Texas legislative districts based on voting-eligible population “would be advantageous to Republicans and non-Hispanic whites.” But that project required more-detailed data on citizenship. “Without a question on citizenship being included on the 2020 Decennial Census questionnaire,” Hofeller wrote, “the use of citizen voting age population is functionally unworkable.” Not surprisingly, the states challenging the citizenship question seized upon the recently uncovered evidence regarding Hofeller’s scheme as further reason to question the administration’s motives.

The other, more commonly recognized way in which a citizenship question could disadvantage Democrats is by discouraging responses from households that include unauthorized residents. Census Bureau staff estimated that the deterrent effect could result in an undercount of about 6.5 million people, which could mean less representation and federal funding for places where illegal immigrants are concentrated—places that tend to elect Democrats. “It is clear [Trump] simply wanted to sow fear in immigrant communities and turbocharge Republican gerrymandering efforts by diluting the political influence of Latino communities,” the ACLU’s Dale Ho, who argued the census case in the Supreme Court, told The New York Times.

That may well be true, but all the administration had to do if it wanted to ask about citizenship in the census was come up with one or more plausible, nonpartisan reasons for doing so early in the process—reasons like the ones to which Trump alluded yesterday. Given the commerce secretary’s broad discretion to determine census questions, even “we would like to have a better idea of how many illegal immigrants live in the United States” would have sufficed. Instead Ross made the decision for unstated reasons, then spent months scrambling for a rationale before settling on the Voting Rights Act cover story that the Court called a “distraction.”

“In my view,” Barr said, “the government has ample justification to inquire about citizenship status on the census, and could plainly provide rationales for doing so that would satisfy the Supreme Court.” If so, why didn’t it do that the first time around? Trump blamed “meritless litigation” for defeating his plan to add a citizenship question. But a more competent administration would have anticipated that litigation and beaten it back in time.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2XK8RI3
via IFTTT

Justin Amash Left the GOP—Opening a New Set of Possibilities in American Politics

When Michigan Congressman Justin Amash announced he was leaving the Republican Party to become an independent, he didn’t just say goodbye to the GOP—he opened up a whole new set of possibilities in American politics. 

In choosing principle over party, the 39-year-old son of a Palestinian refugee has become the spokesman for all Americans who believe in limited government. Since taking office in 2011, Amash has been an outspoken critic of out-of-control government spending, state surveillance, and unauthorized wars. He believes that President Donald Trump engaged in impeachable behavior, but he’s primarily motivated by the belief that Congress is no longer doing its job of writing laws that the Executive branch implements.

“The founders envisioned Congress as a deliberative body in which outcomes are discovered,” Amash wrote in The Washington Post“We are fast approaching the point, however, where Congress exists as little more than a formality to legitimize outcomes dictated by the president, the speaker of the House, and the Senate majority leader.” 

Amash doesn’t believe the system can be reformed from within, telling CNN’s Jake Tapper:

“I don’t think there’s anyone in there who can change the system…. It’s pretty rigid. It’s top-down. It comes down from leadership to the bottom. And over the years it’s gotten more rigid.  It’s more difficult now to change the process than it was a few years ago.”

This is something Amash has been consistent on for his entire time in Congress. He’s called out Nancy Pelosi for strait-jacketing the way legislation is introduced, debated, and voted on—a criticism he leveled against her Republican predecessors. In a 2018 interview with Reason, he lodged this complaint against then-Speaker Paul Ryan (R–Wis.):

The speaker has not been protecting the institution. You need a speaker in there who is an institutionalist, who cares about the institution first, who is not a partisan…. Let Republicans and Democrats and others offer their amendments, and let’s have votes on all sorts of things, substantive things, not just post offices like they do now.

Modern politics is “trapped in a partisan death spiral,” says Amash. But there is a way out if Congress will actually do its job and if the House and Senate become less fixated on partisan advantage. “What you have right now are two parties that are relatively small and weak, and, actually the reason they are so partisan right now is because they are small and weak,” he told Reason. “The future I see is one where there are no strong parties and more independent candidates. We don’t really need the parties anymore.”

Amash says he will run for Congress as an independent and is confident that he can retain his seat. But he also hasn’t ruled out running for president, possibly as a Libertarian.

Whether that happens, Justin Amash has already stirred things up by doing what he believes in rather than what is convenient for partisan purposes. For that alone, he deserves our attention—and commands our respect.

Written by Nick Gillespie. Edited by Paul Detrick.

Photos of Rep. Justin Amash; Credit: Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
Photo of Rep. Justin Amash; Credit: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
Photo of Rep. Justin Amash; Credit: Jim West/ZUMA Press/Newscom
Photos of Rep. Justin Amash townhall; Credit: Jim West/ZUMA Press/Newscom
Photo of Rep. Justin Amash; Credit: Jeff Malet/SIPA/Newscom
Photo of U.S. Capitol; Credit: Frank Fell/robertharding/robertharding/Newscom
Photo of President Donald Trump; Credit: Douglas Christian/ZUMA Press/Newscom
Photo of Rep. Justin Amash; Credit: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
Photo of Speaker Nancy Pelosi; Credit: Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
Photo of Speaker Nancy Pelosi; Credit: KEVIN DIETSCH/UPI/Newscom
Photo of former Speaker Paul Ryan; Credit: Alex Edelman/CNP/AdMedia/SIPA/Newscom
Photo of Sen. Chuck Schumer; Credit: Stefani Reynolds—CNP / MEGA / Newscom
Photo of Sen. Mitch McConnell; Credit; Stefani Reynolds—CNP / MEGA / Newscom
Photo of Rep. Kevin McCarthy; Credit: MIKE THEILER/UPI/Newscom
Photo of Rep. Dick Durbin; Credit: Jeff Malet Photography/Newscom
Photo of Pelosi; Credit: Stefani Reynolds/picture alliance / Consolidated/Newscom

Assembling by Asher Fulero is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://ift.tt/1bFo3O7)
Source: https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary_download?vid=dad7861562106c5d
Artist: Asher Fulero

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/30vKnUI
via IFTTT

Brickbat: The Laws Don’t Apply Here

After an unmarked Michigan State Police SUV ran a stop sign in Detroit and collided with another vehicle, officers jumped out to make sure the other driver was OK. Just kidding. They pulled their Tasers on him, ordered him to the ground, and handcuffed him. Fortunately for that driver,  the accident was caught on the security video from a nearby home. The police say the accident is still under investigation.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2JD0DfV
via IFTTT

Rand Paul Plan Aims to Attract More High-Skilled Immigrants

Overhauling employment visas. On Wednesday, Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) introduced a highly important, eminently reasonable proposal for fixing one aspect of our flawed immigration system. Paul’s Backlog Elimination, Legal Immigration, and Employment Visa Enhancement (BELIEVE) Act would:

  • expand the overall number of employment-based immigration visas that the U.S. allocates annually from 140,000 to 270,000,
  • end per-country caps on employment-based immigration green cards,
  • authorize the spouses and older teenage children of immigrants granted work visas to work in the U.S. themselves without counting toward the annual cap on employment-based visas,
  • make it easier for U.S. employers to hire immigrants in certain desirable work categories (those on the U.S. Department of Labor “Shortage Occupation” list), and
  • make it easier for the children of those with temporary worker permits to stay in the United States upon turning 21.

Paul’s proposal “would solve most of the major issues with skilled immigration in one piece of legislation,” writes Daniel Bier at the Cato Institute’s blog. And it “would do more to move the United States toward a merit-based system than any other legislation introduced this congress. No legislation since the 2013 immigration reform bill that passed the Senate would increase skilled immigration more than this bill.”

A similar but less broad bill passed the House of Representatives earlier this week.


FREE MINDS 

The Trump administration has backed down on its threat to require a citizenship question on the 2020 Census. “In place of the Census question, Trump says he will issue an executive order instructing government agencies to sift through existing databases and documents to determine residents’ immigration status,” Reason‘s Eric Boehm explains.

“I am here to say we are not backing down on our effort to determine the citizenship status of the United States population,” Trump told reporters yesterday. But as Boehm notes, “the administration is backing down from an 18-months-long legal battle to include that question on Census forms—a fight that even many conservatives have suggested was an error from the outset.”


FREE MARKETS

Facebook’s new cryptocurrency, Libra, could weigh down Bitcoin and other decentralized alternative currencies. President Donald Trump recently tweeted his misgivings about both.

“Bitcoin is unfortunately getting caught up in the political fire aimed at Facebook’s plans for a global currency,” Jerry Brito, executive director at the think tank Coin Center, told The Block. “That the president is calling for Libra to be regulated like a bank reflects the fact that Libra is a company issued asset. In contrast, Bitcoin is an open and permissionless network of users like the internet, not a company.”


QUICK HITS

  • “Nearly 18 years since the start of the war in Afghanistan and 16 years since the U.S. invasion of Iraq, majorities of U.S. military veterans say those wars were not worth fighting,” according to a new poll from the Pew Research Center.
  • The National Taxpayers Union asks conservatives to reject Sen. Josh Hawley’s internet censorship bill.
  • After decades of decline, Catholic nunhood is experiencing a resurgence in the millennial generation. This convent cohort is younger, more diverse, and more conservative than their recent predecessors: “Ninety percent of American nuns in 2009 identified as white; last year, fewer than 60 percent of new entrants to convents did. They’re also younger: The average age for taking the final step into the religious life a decade ago was 40. Today, it’s 24.”
  • Support for legal abortion stands at its highest level in more than two decades” in a new Washington Post/ABC News poll.
  • Vanity Fair tackles the Justin Amash presidential speculation. “Those I spoke to agreed that the 39-year-old wasn’t ready to retire from the political arena, sinking into a tenured chair at the Cato Institute or taking a job complaining about Trump on cable news, like some of his former Tea Party peers,” writes Tina Nguyen.
  • Notes on the rise and fall of Portland as platonic hipster ideal:

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2xMuVr2
via IFTTT

Kamala Harris Is Reimagining Herself as a Progressive Prosecutor

For most presidential candidates, the path to the White House is a decades-long process of rising through the political ranks, building alliances and raising money. A few candidates might wake up and say, “Heck, I’m going to run for the presidency,” but most serious contenders are driven by lifelong ambition. Our president is an exception, but that only reminds us of the rule.

Kamala Harris clearly has had lofty ambitions for years as she moved from San Francisco district attorney to California attorney general to our state’s junior U.S. senator. She no longer can be dismissed as a longshot after her successful Democratic debate showing and rising numbers in the polls. As Joe Biden looks like yesterday’s news, Harris now is among those candidates with a genuine shot for the nomination.

This should be a troubling prospect not only for conservatives, but for the progressive wing of Harris’ party. It should also disturb those whose main goal is to replace the current White House occupant. Donald Trump might have an otherworldly sense of reality (it is whatever he says it is), but Harris is pitching a carefully constructed narrative that seems to be at odds with the record.

Forget about all her predictable liberal positions. Every Democratic candidate is going to promise a bevy of lefty policies, ranging from “free” health care to loosened immigration restrictions. To gauge the character of each candidate, voters must look at how each one behaved in prior office. They should look askance at last-minute conversions.

Biden, for instance, supported a war in Iraq that was popular at the time, but now is viewed as a disaster. He authored a crime bill that ramped up sentences. Both measures were products of the time, but they show Biden to be a go-along, get-along guy. Likewise, Harris spent her career as a prosecutor, and there’s no indication she was anything but an enthusiastic backer of the law-and-order status quo.

That’s a crucial issue, because criminal-justice reform now is a core concern of the Democratic base. It’s not only Democrats. President Trump last year signed a justice-reform bill. Many Republicans agree the nation’s tough-on-crime policies, created when fear of crime was a top concern, have gone too far. The pendulum has swung back dramatically in the last couple of years.

Harris now depicts herself as a “progressive prosecutor,” who has made decisions based mainly on her sense of justice. But as professor Lara Bazelon opined in the New York Times earlier this year, “Time after time, when progressives urged her to embrace criminal justice reform…, Ms. Harris opposed them or stayed silent.” She “fought tooth and nail to uphold wrongful convictions that had been secured through official misconduct that included evidence tampering, false testimony and the suppression of crucial information by prosecutors.”

I still recall that video of Harris laughing as she recounts telling her coworkers to “look really mean” when they threatened to send a poor mother to jail because of her kids’ truancy. Harris now strikes the right progressive stances, but during her career she acted like a tried-and-true drug warrior. There’s no evidence that she in any way resisted the zeitgeist.

“By 2005, Harris was also turning against the city’s decade-old Drug Court, which allowed some people arrested on nonviolent possession and small-time sales charges to go to a city-run addiction treatment program…,” wrote Reason’s Elizabeth Nolan Brown. Harris now says she would decriminalize prostitution, but Brown notes, “As a prosecutor she ramped up stings in immigrant communities…spread misinformation about human trafficking, ignored sexual misconduct by police, and aggressively targeted websites where sex workers advertised.”

Harris defended the death penalty in court (although she personally opposes it), resisted releasing a man the Innocence Project found not to have been guilty, backedexpanded asset forfeiture (whereby police confiscate property even if its owner wasn’t convicted of any crime), and seemingly served as the cat’s paw for police unions. Perhaps some conservatives will be cheered by this record, but that’s not the point. It’s that her past actions bear no resemblance to her new persona.

My theory is she served as a prosecutor in an era when law-and-order policies were popular. She wasn’t going to cross some of the most powerful lobbies in the state. This approach would inoculate her from the main “soft on crime” jab that conservatives hurl against liberals, but then a funny thing happened on the way to the presidency. The criminal-justice paradigm shifted quickly and unexpectedly, so now she’s left reimagining most of her political career.

Harris’ current claims about her career speak volumes about her nature. She’s received criticism from progressives who are serious about justice reform, but it’s not keeping her from the prize. That’s the most depressing lesson. A candidate can totally rewrite her record even though that record is easy to examine—and pay no apparent price for it in the polls.

This column was first published in the Orange County Register.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2NRZCpF
via IFTTT

Review: Stuber

Kumail Nanjiani and Dave Bautista are so appealing in Stuber—so personable and droll in their verbal parrying—that you can’t help wishing someone would put them in a buddy comedy someday. It wouldn’t even have to be a top-shelf buddy comedy—something, for example, that might have caught the attention of Eddie Murphy or Mel Gibson back in the day. No, it could be a middling piece of hackwork and Nanjiani and Bautista would probably keep it afloat. Hell, they keep this movie afloat—well, almost—and it’s not even middling hackwork.

Stuber is remarkably bad, even for a genre in which excellence rarely runs rampant. The story has a primordial familiarity. Bautista plays Vic, an LAPD detective obsessed with catching the bigshot drug dealer (Iko Uwais, of The Raid) who shot and killed his partner (a fleeting appearance by Bautista’s Guardians of the Galaxy associate Karen Gillan). Six months after that sad event, Vic still hasn’t captured this guy, and it looks like he won’t be doing so any time soon, because he just had laser eye surgery and then climbed behind the wheel of his car and promptly drove it into a ditch. Undeterred—there are still leads to pursue! —Vic summons an Uber. A driver named Stu (Nanjiani) heeds the call. (Here I think we can agree that combining “Stu” and “Uber” to create a title for this movie is an instance of shameless creative laziness.)

Now we meet Stu. He is of course the polar opposite of Vic. Where Vic is a raging bull and built like a double-wide refrigerator, Stu is mild of manner, reed-like in physique, and frustrated in his Uber job, which consists of ferrying morons around town all day and never getting a coveted five-star rating from any of them. He also has a second gig working at a sporting-goods store (a strained narrative invention). So Stu is ready for change, and he’s hoping to open a “spin gym for women” with his whiny sort-of-girlfriend Becca (Betty Gilpin). This pointless subplot has no payoff, and in an uncharitable mood one might suspect that it was shoehorned into the movie solely to pad it out to 93 minutes.

Stu arrives at Vic’s pickup site and is confronted by an angry, near-blind muscle mountain who commandeers his car until further notice. He then leads Stu off on a tour of the movie’s requisite assortment of kooky characters, with furious gun battles inserted along the way. There’s a stop at a gay strip club (where Steve Howey has a funny bit as one of the strippers) followed by a visit to a ghetto drug den, outside of which Stu accidentally shoots one of the dealers. This wounded lowlife then has to be transported for repair to a veterinary hospital that Vic patronizes in such legally shadowy situations. There are also low-impact plot complications provided by Vic’s needy daughter (Natalie Morales) and his boss, Captain McHenry (Mira Sorvino). And more gun battles, of course.

The movie fails in areas you might have thought it hard to screw up at this late date in action-flick history. To begin with, the action is incoherent—the uninventive fight choreography lacks detail and thus oomph, and the juddery camerawork keeps you wondering what’s going on at all times. Director Michael Dowse also mounts a car chase that consists just about entirely of car-chase clichés. And the script, by Tripper Clancy (whose resume consists of two previous German-language features), is hobbled by a pair of irritating implausibilities. One, why would a cop who can barely see insist on barging around with a gun in search of a suspect who will be, at best, only a blur if he somehow finds him? And two, why would Nanjiani’s Uber driver not bail on this rampaging rider at the first opportunity? A similar question will likely occur to any viewers who find themselves trapped in a theatre with this movie.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2YR6JPW
via IFTTT

The End of the Free Internet Is Near

Not too long ago, conventional wisdom held that the internet should enjoy minimal government oversight precisely because it was a technology that enabled open and free speech for everyone. The remedy for hateful and offensive remarks, that 1990s-vintage argument went, was more speech—or logging off.

This principle, which can be traced back through the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas and John Stuart Mill, was nicely captured in the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1997 decision striking down certain speech-chilling provisions of the Communications Decency Act. “Through the use of chat rooms,” Justice John Paul Stevens wrote, “any person with a phone line can become a town crier with a voice that resonates farther than it could from any soapbox. Through the use of Web pages, mail exploders, and newsgroups, the same individual can become a pamphleteer.”

A generation later, Stevens’ argument has been not merely discarded. It has been inverted.

Politicians now insist that the internet should be subject to increased regulations precisely because it allows that hypothetical town crier to speak with a voice that resonates farther than it could from any physical soapbox. The possibility of freewheeling online discussions has been transformed, in other words, from virtue to vice. Platforms like Facebook and YouTube increasingly face demands that they restrict content. In some cases the demands are effected through public pressure, in others through outright government censorship.

The movement to stifle online expression is still in its early stages, but it represents a fundamental threat to the principles that have allowed the internet as we know it to grow and thrive. If these efforts continue, we may soon see the end of the free and open web.

Europe vs. Big Tech

At the vanguard of the efforts to restrict online speech are, ironically, Western nations that have historically prized free expression—in particular, the European Union.

In March, members of the European Parliament approved a Copyright Directive. What’s known as Article 13 of the measure (renumbered as Article 17 in the final version) will require technology companies to impose “upload filters” to scan user-provided content and remove material viewed as unlawful. If a service provider fails to delete “copyright-protected works and other subject matter,” the text says, it “shall be liable for unauthorized acts of communication.”

Internet pioneer Vint Cerf, World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee, Electronic Frontier Foundation co-founder John Gilmore, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, and dozens of other prominent technologists denounced Article 13 as “an unprecedented step towards the transformation of the Internet from an open platform for sharing and innovation, into a tool for the automated surveillance and control of its users.”

Their arguments failed. An amendment that would have removed the upload filter requirement from the Copyright Directive was defeated by five votes.

In the short term, that will probably grant an unintended competitive advantage to large U.S.-based companies such as Facebook, Google, and Twitter, which possess the resources to devise, test, and implement automatic filtering technologies. Smaller startups will find compliance more of a challenge. Nonprofit efforts such as Wikipedia and websites run by individuals are likely to shoulder even greater burdens.

Other E.U. measures include last year’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which imposed new rules on how businesses can handle and use user data, and this year’s so-called platform-to-business rules, announced in draft form in February. The latter step is less known but arguably reaches further: Slated to take effect in February 2020, these regulations will control the business practices of “online platforms,” including search engines, voice assistants, app stores, online marketplaces, price comparison tools, and some social media applications. They will be subject to new rules, including a ban on such “unfair practices” as suspending a user’s account without explanation.

The French government applauded the draft rules in a statement, saying that the E.U. will now be able to “steer the market in the right direction”—though what the “right direction” is was left unsaid—while lamenting that they do not go further by regulating electronic devices too.

Privatizing Censorship

If Brexit actually happens and the U.K. manages to extricate itself from the European Union, Britain’s internet users and businesses will be fortunate to escape the full impact of these efforts. But Westminster’s elite have not been idle.

In April, the British government published a proposal, the “Online Harms White Paper,” that echoes the approach of the E.U. Copyright Directive by holding tech companies, in particular social media platforms, liable for what their users post or upload. Under such a legal regime, internet censorship would be effectively privatized, as businesses would have no choice but to monitor and restrict users.

Among the online “harms” the U.K. proposes to outlaw are “extremist content,” “disinformation,” “violent content,” and “trolling,” which could include anything from what a government agency decrees to be fake news to remarks critical of the Prophet Muhammad. Another offensive category is “glamorization of weapons,” which invites questions about how it may be applied to venerable British institutions like the National Museum of Arms and Armour, the nation’s oldest museum.

In an April op-ed for CNN, Jeremy Wright, the U.K.’s secretary of state for digital, culture, media, and sport, argued for this adventure in online censorship by likening, without irony, adult internet users to young children. “It is similar to the principle that when you take your child to a playground, you trust that the builder made sure the equipment was safe and that no harm will come to them,” Wright wrote.

The U.K.’s free market Adam Smith Institute calls the “Online Harms White Paper” illiberal and incompatible with English principles of freedom: “This proposal is about preventing Internet users from engaging in knowing and voluntary speech, and it’s about recruiting vast armies of private sector policemen to patrol their thoughts.”

Perhaps most problematic, the Adam Smith Institute points out, is that the U.K. proposes to restrict political speech that remains legal elsewhere in the English-speaking world. It is no exaggeration to say that “glamorization of weapons” is a popular hobby in the United States—and is fully protected by the American First and Second Amendments.

Other nations are edging in the same illiberal direction. Soon after the Christchurch, New Zealand, mosque massacre that killed 51 people, Australia enacted a new law punishing the publication or hosting of “abhorrent violent material” with up to three years in prison. According to the law, it “is immaterial whether the hosting service is provided within or outside Australia.”

Read broadly, this suggests that executives of U.S. and other foreign hosting services—at least those failing to strictly censor their services for Australian audiences—could face legal peril if they visited Sydney on vacation. The law also allows television stations to broadcast violent material while prohibiting Twitter users from posting an identical video online.

That was too much even for Australia’s Labor Party. “There needs to be proper consultation with not just the social media sector but also traditional media, who are also caught up by this bill and whose legitimate journalism and online news sites will also be impacted on by these laws,” said Mark Dreyfus, a Labor representative and former attorney general, during the parliamentary debate. Dreyfus warned the law was being rushed through Parliament for political reasons “as this chaotic and desperate government careen[ed] toward” an election this spring.

For his part, New Zealand’s Chief Censor David Shanks—yes, this is an actual government title—ruled that the video recorded by the Christchurch shooter and his accompanying manifesto both fell under the category of “objectionable” material and would be illegal to watch or read. The censorship office’s classification decision said the manifesto “promotes and encourages acts of terrorism in a way that is likely to be persuasive to its intended audience.” Merely viewing the document in electronic form, even if it is not downloaded to local storage, is punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

It is possible that New Zealand’s censorship will prevent further extremist violence. But it is more likely that a formal ban will turn the Christchurch shooter into a kind of free speech martyr, bringing more attention to his loathsome ideology. Forbidden ideas have a tendency to draw the curious and the untethered.

The United States of Deplatforming

So far, at least, the U.S. government has yet to appoint a chief censor. But Silicon Valley’s coastal elites have been eager to volunteer their services gratis.

The last year has marked a dispiriting new low in the “deplatforming,” or banning from various online channels, of dissident voices. The ax fell on Infowars’ Alex Jones, actor James Woods, the editorial director of AntiWar.com, the director of the Ron Paul Institute, and radio talk show host Jesse Kelly. (Some of these accounts have since been reinstated.)

Lawmakers have encouraged these social media bans. Congressional hearings have been called to interrogate tech execs on how their products are being used. Last August, Sen. Chris Murphy (D–Conn.) urged an even broader crackdown, proclaiming on Twitter that “the survival of our democracy depends on it.”

Rep. Bennie Thompson (D–Miss.), chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, must have been listening. In March, Thompson sent a letter to Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and Microsoft insisting that they remove “toxic and violent” content, even if it is legal to distribute in the United States. (The platforms already prohibit illegal content.) If the companies are “unwilling” to do so voluntarily, Thompson warned, Congress will “consider policies” to compel their cooperation. Left unexplained was how any such requirement could comply with the First Amendment.

The Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act, better known as FOSTA, ended the federal government’s laissez faire approach to internet companies when it was enacted in April 2018. Executives are now criminally liable if they own, manage, or operate a service “with the intent to promote or facilitate the prostitution of another person.” The Electronic Frontier Foundation has filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of FOSTA, saying it muzzles constitutionally protected speech and is not tailored enough to comply with the First Amendment.

The World’s Most Effective Censor

Whatever threats from constitutionally challenged politicians the United States faces, it remains a beacon of freedom compared to China, which can claim the dubious honor of most effective internet censor in the world. Social media apps are blocked, political content is restricted, and activists and journalists who document human rights abuses may be arrested and held in lengthy pretrial detention. Anonymity is impeded, with real names required.

The country’s constitution says that “Citizens of the People’s Republic of China enjoy freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of association, of procession and of demonstration.” But the reality is that the internet in China is almost entirely subservient to government whims.

As Freedom House, a nonprofit group advocating for political freedom, reports, “websites and social media accounts are subject to deletion or closure at the request of censorship authorities, and Internet companies are required to proactively monitor and delete problematic content or face punishment.” In addition, “officials systematically instruct Internet outlets to amplify content from state media and downplay news, even from some state-affiliated media, that might generate public criticism of the government.” Hundreds of popular websites are blocked by the country, including Google, Facebook, Whats-App, YouTube, Flickr, Tumblr, Dropbox, Instagram, SoundCloud, WordPress, and Pinterest.

In 2017, China reinforced its control of the web with a law that increased censorship rules and, more worryingly, required that user data be stored on the Chinese mainland. “Data localization,” as it’s called, means that sensitive personal records will be easily available to police and intelligence agencies. U.S.-based companies such as Airbnb and Evernote dutifully moved Chinese user data to state-controlled companies. Last year Apple announced, without elaboration, that it was shifting iCloud operations for all its mainland Chinese customers to a government-owned local partner, Guizhou-Cloud Big Data Industry.

China is not alone in its efforts to control the internet. Instead, it is leading the way among authoritarian nations. Russia and Nigeria now have similar, though less comprehensive, data localization laws.

Getting Back to Our Roots

What nearly all of these extrusions of governmental interference have in common is that they focus their attention on the large internet companies that act as common platforms.

A small number of massive, slow-moving regulatory targets is a delightful state of affairs, at least from the perspective of Brussels or Beijing. It’s far easier to pressure a few huge multinationals equipped with risk-averse legal departments than it is to control millions of unpredictable internet users, some of whom are certain to ignore bureaucratic diktats—or to invent creative ways to circumvent them.

When the U.S. government decreed that encryption was a munition—essentially a dangerous weapon subject to federal rules for exporting arms and tanks—Microsoft and Netscape complied. But programmer-activists thumbed their noses at the rules by exporting the source code of popular PGP encryption protocols in book form. Others shrunk the RSA encryption algorithm to three lines of code in the Perl programming language, which they gleefully wore on T-shirts. The Justice Department declined to make an example of these scofflaws.

Today, there’s keen interest in homebrew gunsmithing, whether local laws permit it or not, thanks to online code repositories, such as GitHub and Defense Distributed’s DefCad. These sites offer design files that allow key components of working firearms to be manufactured at home using a 3D printer.

There is no natural law of computing that says search must be centralized in Google or Baidu, social networking must happen on Facebook or WeChat, auctions must go through eBay or Alibaba, and so on. What we’re accustomed to today represents a historic shift, one that’s difficult to overstate, from an earlier era of the internet. From the moment of its public release at 2:56 p.m. Greenwich Mean Time on August 6, 1991, the World Wide Web was meant to be decentralized. Anyone could browse from any connected device. Every person with the technological means could set up his or her own website. The gatekeepers were gone.

It’s true that centralized platforms have advantages, including improved security and better resistance to spam and abuse. They can also be quicker to build. But centralization brings costs with it, including providing a single convenient point of control for governments eager to experiment with censorship and surveillance.

There are some tantalizing hints that decentralization will return. Bitcoin and Ethereum, two blockchain-based computing platforms, are prominent examples. Solid—an open-source project backed by World Wide Web mastermind Berners-Lee—is intended to help you keep ownership of your own data by placing it under your control. The Internet Archive has hosted a pair of Decentralized Web Summits in San Francisco. Prototypes of distributed search engines, wikis, and Slack-like chat programs exist.

If a decentralized internet does return, it will likely arise only as a response to regulatory overreach by governments—and primarily because cryptonetworks provide developers and maintainers with economic incentives in the form of digital currency if they participate. A key advantage of open-source programming is developer friendliness: Twitter, especially, is notorious for disabling features that developers had relied on. Google’s feature killing is memorialized at KilledByGoogle.com. When no one owns a platform, that sort of thing is much less likely to happen.

Chris Dixon, an entrepreneur turned venture capitalist in Silicon Valley, wrote in a well-read February 2018 post on Medium: “Today, unaccountable groups of employees at large platforms decide how information gets ranked and filtered, which users get promoted and which get banned, and other important governance decisions. In cryptonetworks, these decisions are made by the community, using open and transparent mechanisms.”

Decentralization is hardly a perfect solution to the internet’s ills, but it’s likely to be better than the unhappy situation we find ourselves in today.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2XJe73B
via IFTTT

Do You Work for an ISP, a Blog Hosting Company, a Domain Name Registrar, or the Like?

If so, I have a quick question I was hoping I might run by you. (Your answer might well be, “I don’t know, but you can talk to this coworker of mine,” which would be just fine by me.) If you’re willing to chat, please e-mail me at volokh at law.ucla.edu.

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2xJDBOJ
via IFTTT

Update on the Preakness Takings Case

The Preakness.

Back in March, I wrote about the City of Baltimore’s lawsuit attempting to use eminent domain to take the Preakness Stakes Triple Crown horse race, in order to prevent the owners from moving it to a different location. As explained in the previous post, the case raised several important legal issues. This post is a brief update on developments since then.

In mid-June, the City dropped its lawsuit, apparently as part of an agreement with the owners to continue negotiating on possible ways to ensure that the race will stay in its current location in Baltimore, instead of moving elsewhere in Maryland (as the owners previously hoped to do). Later that same month, the owners and the City entered into a “new phase of negotiations” intended to keep the race at the deteriorating Pimlico Race Course, which is badly in need of repair.

At least for the moment, the City is no longer trying to condemn either the Pimlico Race Course, or the Preakness Stakes horse race.  The legal community may therefore miss out on a case that raises multiple thorny issues, such as whether the intellectual property and trade marks associated with the race are within Baltimore’s jurisdiction, and whether condemning a horse race to keep it from moving to a new location violates the Dormant Commerce Clause. Had the lawsuit gone forward, it would have been a virtual full-employment act for eminent domain experts!

However, the dismissal of the case of was “without prejudice.”  That means the city could potential refile it, if negotiations go badly. Moreover, it is hard to say to what extent the threat of condemnation might have been a factor in forcing the owners to reconsider their apparent plan to move. If the business community is left with the impression that the owners gave in under the threat of eminent domain, it could incentivize other enterprises to flee before they suffer the same fate.

The negotiations also raise the possibility that either the city or the state government will subsidize the refurbishing of Pimlico, thus in effect paying the owners of the Preakness to stay. Economists across the political spectrum recognize that government subsidies for sports stadiums are a terrible idea, and almost always have costs that outweigh any benefits to local economic development.

The (for now) abortive effort to condemn the Preakness Stakes is just part of a long history of Maryland efforts to try to keep businesses from leaving by threatening them with the use of eminent domain. I summarized it in my earlier post about this case:

This is not the first time Maryland authorities have tried to use eminent domain to keep a prominent entertainment business from moving. In 1984, the state famously tried to condemn the Baltimore Colts to keep them from moving to Indianapolis. The plan failed when the franchise literally escaped in the dead of night. As [Walter] Olson notes, the state used the threat of eminent domain to keep the Preakness from moving in 2009—only to end up with an increasingly troubled enterprise, and a decaying race track. In 2014, the state legislature considered, but ultimately rejected an ill-considered plan to condemn the popular TV show “House of Cards” in order to prevent it from filming in another state.

Hopefully, the city and state governments have finally figured out that the better way to grow their economies is to create an environment where people will want to locate of their own free will. The threat of eminent domain might force some businesses to stay when they might otherwise have left. But such shenanigans are also likely to scare away other entrepreneurs and investors, who are not likely to do business in the state if doing so risks having their property condemned if things go badly.

While these kinds of cases are a bonanza for takings lawyers, Baltimore is unlikely to succeed in condemning its way to prosperity.When it comes to using eminent domain to keep horse races and other enterprises from moving, I remain a “neighsayer.”

 

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2ScyFeK
via IFTTT