Where does President Biden stand on internet censorship?

Where does President Biden stand on internet censorship?


Paul Bischoff

Tech Writer, Privacy Advocate and VPN Expert

Will President Biden try to censor the web?

President Biden took office at a critical junction for the future of the internet. His administration must decide on issues that will have long-lasting impacts on free speech and the free flow of information online. In this article, we’ll discuss the major censorship issues that Biden will have to contend with in the next four years.

Policing online speech and Section 230

If, how, and by whom online speech should be policed is an ongoing debate. In an age of misinformation, disinformation, scams, abuse, hate speech, harassment, and incitement, many people want tighter controls on online speech. But who creates and enforces those rules, and the government’s role in this, is controversial.

Many free speech advocates would prefer if the government did not have a hand in policing speech, at least not without due process and proper litigation. Some say it should be the job of tech companies like Facebook and YouTube to police themselves according to their own rules and guidelines. Others say the government should set those guidelines.

One popular idea is that the government should hold tech companies responsible for speech posted by their users. This is the basic argument behind the repeal of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Section 230 states, “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another content provider.”

Section 230 became a pillar of what the internet is today. If it were removed, tech companies would have to be much more careful about what they allow to be posted, likely requiring them to pre-screen all content. This might reduce misinformation and abuse, but it would be extremely burdensome for content moderation teams and likely result in a lot of censorship.

During the run up to the 2020 election, President Trump lashed out against Twitter and other social media companies because they labeled or censored his posts. He rallied his supporters to advocate for the repeal of Section 230. Doing so would certainly be bad for Twitter, but it would probably have no material impact on Twitter’s censorship policy. Remember that Section 230 holds Twitter accountable for what users post, not what it decides to censor. It seems Trump just wanted to punish Twitter, not change its censorship policy.

But even though Trump was vehemently opposed to Section 230, Biden didn’t take the opposite side. Democrats have their own concerns about Section 230, and Biden publicly stated it should be revoked in January 2021 in order to stem misinformation online.

As of the time of writing, Democrats and the Biden administration are considering amending the law, rather than repealing it entirely. They want to hold tech companies more responsible for moderating content on their services, but it’s not clear how such an amendment will take shape.

It’s worth mentioning that Biden tended to be on the winning side of censorship more often than not during his campaign. In one notable example, Twitter and Facebook censored an article published by the New York Post alleging the then-candidate’s son’s ties to a Ukrainian Energy firm.

Biden’s website says it plans to create a task force that will recommend how governments, tech companies, schools, and other organizations should deal with online harassment. The task force’s recommendations could include regulating tech companies or changes to Section 230.

Government-funded research and reports

Most academic research in the United States is federally funded and thus paid for by taxpayers, but much of it is not public. Academic publishers act as gatekeepers, charging libraries and individuals exorbitant fees to access research that was publicly funded. Often the authors submit their research for free, so the profits are solely harvested by publishers.

Open access initiatives seek to allow public access to publicly funded academic research at no cost and with no penalty for sharing.

Biden has openly supported removing barriers to fast, public access to research papers and data.

Prior to Biden, the Trump administration censored research, data, and other materials relating to climate change. The previous administration also issued a rule that allowed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to downplay or ignore medical data related to pollution and exposure to toxic substances.

The Biden administration has signaled it has no interest in limiting the ability of federal agencies to use the “best available science.” Climate change is now a front-and-center subject on environmental agencies’ websites again.

Censorship in other countries

Censorship of the internet is common in autocratic countries. Content blocks are usually carried out by internet service providers at the behest of the government. Those in power use censorship to silence dissent, prevent opponents from communicating and organizing, and keep out external influence.

In 2011, Biden gave a speech in which he warned countries that engaging in censorship wouldn’t reap the internet’s economic benefits. He hasn’t explicitly said much more on other countries’ web censorship since then.

As vice president in 2013, Biden weighed into Chinese authorities for withholding visas from Western reporters working in the country.

End-to-end encryption

Although end-to-end encryption (E2EE) is more of a privacy issue than a censorship one, it’s still worth mentioning here. End-to-end encryption ensures that only the recipient of a message or file can decrypt it. Even the developer of the app that facilitates the communication cannot decrypt the message.

E2EE allows two or more parties to privately communicate without worrying about snooping by any third parties. Advocates say it’s good for privacy, but opponents say it protects criminals, which is why some people want it banned. It’s used in many file transfer and communication apps, including WhatsApp and Telegram.

Banning E2EE, or requiring backdoor access for law enforcement, would give governments unrestricted access to private communications, which in turn would have a chilling effect on free speech. People don’t communicate freely if they know they’re being monitored. Furthermore, cybersecurity experts argue that an encryption backdoor for law enforcement would also be a backdoor for criminals and nation-state threat actors.

The Obama administration engaged in no small amount of cyberspying and bulk data collection while Biden was VP, as revealed by Edward Snowden in 2013. Those policies don’t look good in the eyes of privacy advocates, but it’s not entirely clear where Biden stands on E2EE at the time of writing.

Biden-Harris” by deckerme licensed under CC BY 2.0

 

(This article was originally posted on Comparitech and reposted with the permission of Comparitech).