Facebook’s Fate May Hinge On Two Key Questions

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Platform or publisher? Private or public?

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On May 15, the White House tweeted,

No matter your views, if you suspect political bias has caused you to be censored or silenced online, we want to hear about it!

The tweet linked to a 16-part form to report suspected political censorship by social media “for unclear ‘violations’ of user policies,” especially by Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

Alleged Bias and Targeted Banning

Accusations that Facebook is biased against critics of left-wing ideology may lead the federal government to regulate or break up the social media giant. (In fairness, Facebook has also blocked some users on the left.) A spotlight is being shone on Facebook’s alleged bias. The prominent black conservative Candace Owens, for example, was recently suspended from her account for claiming liberal policies incentivize fatherless homes. After media backlash, Facebook reversed her suspension, calling it “a mistake.” The evidence suggests it was a targeted action, however.

Owens was lucky. Many of those blocked, suspended, or banned seem baffled about ‘why’ or ‘how’ to rectify it. The Center for Prosecutor Integrity is typical. CPI defends due process and argues against a “believe the victim” approach. A recent petition to protest an accused student’s treatment by a campus sexual misconduct hearing was blocked by Facebook without explanation. CPI has not appealed because past attempts to do so have failed.

The confusion of users is usually over banned material that had no obscenity, libel, calls for violence, hate speech, or seemingly objectionable content. (Facebook’s community standards are here.)

Government Involvement

Whether or not Facebook is actually biased, it may soon confront regulation or breakup, especially as prominent Democrats like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders join the call for its dismemberment. At that point, two questions will loom large. Is Facebook a platform or publisher? Is it a public or private company?

For years, Facebook described itself as a platform—an array of services, tools, and products through which third parties create their own content. A platform is not legally responsible for content any more than a phone company is responsible for conversations. The immunity comes from Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.” By contrast, a publisher edits or controls content and can be held legally liable for it.

Facebook officially became a publisher in early 2018. The Guardian explained:

In a small courtroom in California…attorneys for the social media company…repeatedly argued, [Facebook] is a publisher, and…makes editorial decisions, which are protected by the first amendment.

Facebook was likened to a newspaper.

Is Facebook a Speaker or Public Forum?

In April, at a Senate hearing about Facebook, CEO Mark Zuckerberg stated that his company is “responsible for the content.” There, Senator Ted Cruz spelled out the legal implications by asking Zuckerberg,

Are you a First Amendment speaker expressing your views, or are you a neutral public forum allowing everyone to speak?…The predicate for Section 230 immunity under the CDA is that you’re a neutral public forum.

A First Amendment defense now seems most likely. If so, Facebook must answer the second question: private or public?

There are two ways to approach this question. One is purely legal. The other addresses its function.

Legally, a private company is owned by an individual or a small group, and shares are not traded on a stock market; by contrast, a public company trades shares on an exchange and is partially owned by these shareholders. Private companies exert great control over defining their policies; public ones are subject to more government oversight. Facebook’s initial public offering occurred in 2012, which seems to settle the legal issue.

Facebook Can’t Have it Both Ways

Functionally, Facebook wants “private” status and immunity from First Amendment claims because it acts under the de facto direction of Zuckerberg to provide a private, rather than governmental, service. But the situation is complicated. Facebook receives massive tax breaks and subsidies, which usually come with an agreement to comply with government requirements. It also actively cooperates with government agencies. Several years ago, The Guardian offered a notorious example.

The article explained,

Top-secret Prism program claims direct access to servers of firms including Google, Apple and Facebook….The NSA access is part of a previously undisclosed program called Prism, which allows officials to collect material including search history, the content of emails, file transfers and live chats, the document says.

Bloomberg offered a more recent one. The headline proclaimed, “U.S. Military to Trawl Through 350 Billion Social Media Messages.” Facebook’s content figures significantly in the “military trawl.”

Facebook cannot both claim First Amendment immunity and function as an arm of the government. Facebook is legally responsible for its content and any discriminatory actions.

Its value to government as an auxiliary may shield it, however, as Congress is unlikely to break it up and make it less valuable. Congress will likely push for greater regulation of the existing structure. Presidential candidates will threaten the separation of Facebook into two or three companies, in a manner similar to AT&T, because there is a popular backlash against the giant. But Congress itself will likely opt for regulation. Whether or not this will affect the alleged discrimination is not clear.


Wendy McElroy

Wendy McElroy is an individualist feminist and libertarian who has authored or edited over a dozen books as well as hundreds of articles and essays. She has been published by such diverse venues as Penn State to Penthouse, FEE to Marie Claire. The founder of ifeminists.com, her e-home is wendymcelroy.com.

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.