Edition


Vol. 57, No. 1

In this edition

With our nation approaching the third anniversary of the COVID-19 lockdown, the latest edition of The Ripon Forum examines the state of pandemic preparedness in America and the fact that our country has fewer doctors than virtually every other developed country in the world.

BREAKING POINT

The United States has fewer physicians per capita than virtually every other developed country. At first glance, our lack of physicians is a puzzle. 

Protecting the Doctor-Patient Relationship

Many health care practices we consider essential are slowly becoming things of the past or recent memory.

We Are Not Ready for the Next Pandemic. That’s A Choice.

Hundreds of Americans are still dying each day from COVID-19, while the next pandemic could strike at any time – and be much more deadly. In many ways we are even less prepared than before COVID-19.

Not Accountable

Philip Howard returns with a new book about government dysfunction and a bold recommendation for reform.

Keys to a Successful Congress: Leaders who lead, and Committees that are allowed do all the work

The new 118th Congress convened last month amid searing speculation about what good will come out of it. 

Our Laboratories of Democracy Can Improve the Republic

How states are leading the way on election reform 

A Mechanism to Reduce Spending That Once had Joe Biden’s Support

“When adopted,” then-Senator Joe Biden stated, “it will provide Congress with an essential tool for reviewing the need for Federal programs.”

Don’t Repeal the Law That Created the Internet

Without Section 230, as one leading appellate judge (a Republican appointee) put it, websites would “face death by ten thousand duck-bites.”

Section 230 is the counter-productive U.S. policy and law that makes Big-Tech unaccountable.  

As the Internet evolves, so must the law and policy regarding it.

Ripon Profile of Darin LaHood

The Representative of Illinois’ 16th Congressional District discusses his time in Congress and his legislative priorities.

Section 230 is the counter-productive U.S. policy and law that makes Big-Tech unaccountable.  

First – what is Section 230 and why should Americans care?

In a nutshell, Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act is America’s only policy and law governing conduct on the Internet.

When Congress established “the policy of the United States” that the Internet and its services be “unfettered from Federal and State regulation,” the Internet was a bulletin board with dialup speed that was used by early adopters 30 minutes a month.

Section 230 was designed to encourage the buildout and adoption of the nascent Internet. It accomplished that objective. However, as the Internet matured, this policy resulted in many unintended consequences, including lost privacy, dishonest dealings, abuse of minors, extreme polarization, monopolizations, cyberattacks, and cybercrime.

Indeed, what some characterize as a ‘Wild West’ Internet policy has spawned way beyond simply minimizing regulation and a “hands-off” approach by government. Indeed, no rule of law, no policing to protect the public, and no accountability. This has resulted in a form of U.S.-approached anarchism, which has been on autopilot since 1996. One could argue it has resulted in government-approved amoralism, which not only has minimal concern for right and wrong, but which denies the legal duty of care online that every American can expect offline.

As the Internet matured, this policy resulted in many unintended consequences, including lost privacy, dishonest dealings, abuse of minors, extreme polarization, monopolizations, cyberattacks, and cybercrime.

Is Section 230 an ‘extreme machine’ of unintended consequences?

Yes! Most know one gets the behavior one tolerates and encourages. Inputs cause outputs, and the inaction permitted by Section 230 has created a swelling monsoon of unregulated and often illegal activity online. Section 230’s intent was:

  • To “ensure vigorous enforcement of criminal laws” – the reality is less than .05% of cybercrime is prosecuted.
  • To promote decency online through the “Communications Decency Act” – the reality is indecent materials are rife online.
  • To have “no effect on communications privacy law”— the reality is privacy is lost online.
  • To create “a forum for a true diversity of political discourse,” – the reality is lies, fakery, censorship, disinformation, polarization, hate, and violence, are rampant online.
  • To “empower parents to restrict their children’s access to inappropriate online material” – the reality is there are no age-appropriate protections and there are more out-of-control indecent materials than one can imagine.
  • To “promote competition and reduce regulation” – the reality is there are monopolizations and drastic de-governing.

Why repeal Section 230?

As the Internet evolves, so must the law and policy regarding it. Keeping Section 230 in place only paves the way for Big Tech to steamroll over elected officials, our judicial system, and any source of accountability. Here, I have identified the “Big 8” reasons why Section 230 must be repealed:

  1. Unnecessary. Internet companies are free to buy private liability insurance or operate with reasonable care like everyone else has a legal duty to do. And they can innovate and compete based on reason, care, and integrity.
  2. Antiquated. The U.S. has gone from being the world’s leader in setting Internet policy and law, to being the world’s laggard in 2023 and is the only major nation yet to modernize its policy on Internet conduct.
  3. National Neglect. Section 230 addresses only one type of misconduct on the Internet – defamation liability for false statements – neglecting all other harms. As a result, five administrations, fourteen congresses, and seventeen Supreme Court justices, together, have neglected to protect America, Americans, and minors from all other online harms and crimes for 27 years!
  4. Makes Big-Tech Accountable. Section 230’s anarchic Internet policy is the Houdini superpower that enables Big-Tech to routinely escape responsibility for their actions and anticompetitive abuses. Over time, Section 230’s intermediary immunity law has in fact established an online regime of Big-Tech, by Big-Tech, for Big-Tech with impunity to censor, spread disinformation, and turn a blind eye to incitement, hate, and violence. Privileged treatment causes polarization that undermines democracy and divides the nation.
  5. Depolarizing. Repeal is the only constitutional, fair, and accountable solution for Big-Tech/social media’s out-of-control intermediary impunity. A rewrite of Section 230 would put Congress in the position of adjudicating the Bill of Rights. Only repeal prevents Congress from facilitating censorship and the spread of disinformation.
  6. Willful Blindness. Most of Big Tech and its paid proponents plead Section 230 is an Internet essential that harms no one. Their scripted silence about Section 230’s many harms hiding in plain sight is, at best, a collective half-truth, and at worst, widespread willful blindness. Research and evidence by the Restore Us Institute actually reveals that America and Americans are worse off now than before the ‘Wild West’ Internet. The fact is Section 230 has subverted the Constitution, public safety, national security, justice, religion, and liberties/rights.
  7. Internet Injustice. Today, Congress’ Section 230 precedents disenfranchise the civil judiciary’s adjudication of Internet illegal conduct cases to legitimately determine truth-lies, fair-unfair, and legal-illegal. Instead, Congress has unreasonably empowered random unvetted private actors with immunity to mediate all of Americans’ interactions arbitrarily for profit, surveillance, politics, power, and dominance.
  8. Existential Enemy. Government officials have sworn to “defend the Constitution…against all enemies…” Section 230 is an existential enemy of the Constitution because it subverts the government’s sovereignty, authority, and purposes.
Over time, Section 230’s intermediary immunity law has in fact established an online regime of Big-Tech, by Big-Tech, for Big-Tech with impunity to censor, spread disinformation, and turn a blind eye to incitement, hate, and violence. Privileged polarization destroys democracy and makes a nation divided that cannot stand.

Does Section 230 repeal, produce intended consequences?

Yes. The repeal ends any notion the U.S. Internet is separate from America, and will intentionally restore the ideal that no one or nothing is above the law or outside governing authorities.

Repeal purposefully restores America’s government “of the people, by the people, for the people,” in intentionally restoring this primacy of people. It will help prioritize humanity over technology and people over profit, and recognize the need to protect minors over adults.

Conclusion

Repeal is not regulation. Repeal of Section 230 removes the Internet as a space free from the rule of law; it allows the laws of the nation to apply to the Internet, thus subjecting all players to the appropriate governing authorities. Repeal ends special treatment online. Repeal will pave the way for the same rules and rights everyone holds offline to be upheld online. Those acting illegally online are held accountable just as those acting illegally offline are. Unprotected speech offline is unprotected speech online. Repeal of Section 230 is the only way to pursue “Equal justice under law.

Scott Cleland is Executive Director of the Restore Us Institute (RUI), an Internet policy think tank and nonpartisan, faith-based nonprofit with a mission to restore Internet accountability to protect people from online harm. Cleland was Deputy U.S. Coordinator for International Communications and information Policy in the H.W. Bush Administration. To learn more, visit www.RestoreUsInstitute.org and www.ScottCleland.com.