Thursday, December 14, 2006

Bloggers responsible for their commenters?

From MeFi:


|AMP|#8220;Senator John McCain (R. - AZ) has introduced legislation [PDF] that would hold blogs responsible for all activity in their comments sections and user profiles. Provisions of the proposed bill include: (1) commercial websites and personal blogs "would be required to report illegal images or videos posted by their users or pay fines of up to $300,000," (2) bloggers with comment sections may face "even stiffer penalties" than ISPs, and (3) any social-networking site must take "effective measures" to remove any Web page that's "associated" with a sex offender. "Because 'social-networking site' isn't defined, it could encompass far more than just MySpace.com, Friendster and similar sites." The list could include any site that allows comments, author [sic] and personal profiles. Kevin Bankston of the Electronic Frontier Foundation notes that this proposal may be based more "on fear or political considerations rather than on the facts." "McCain's [sic] legislation could deal a serious blow to the blogosphere. Lacking resources to police their sites, many individual blogs may have to shut down open discussion."*



Rut roh. Fining bloggers up to $300,000 for the comments they inspire? Write your congressmen and congresswomen, people!


We've seen a lot of legislative proposals in the last ten years seeking to regulate the internet. I don't have a problem with requiring bloggers (or anyone else) to remove copyrighted or illegal material from their blogs, or even from their comments. I do have a problem with making bloggers responsible for content that does not originate from them. The "easy" way to solve this problem, from the blogger's perspective, would be to screen all comments, but big blogs (like Wil Wheaton's, or community blogs like MeFi or Slashdot), that's pretty much a full-time job in and of itself. Perhaps more importantly, one of the great things about unscreened comments is that users know they aren't being censored, and neither is anyone else. Furthermore, isn't $300,000 a bit excessive for a personal blog? Yikes.


Then there's the social networking/sex offender issue. Many social networking sites tout business networking as their primary functions, and even the infamous MySpace has age restrictions. The ex-sex offender issue is particularly biting: sex offenders have served their debt to society, yet they ostensibly have a high rate of recidivism (although recent studies suggest that rates of recidivism are falling). My home state of California recently passed a bill requiring high-risk sex-offenders to wear a tracking device for their entire lives after release from prison. As Lanier pointed out when we were discussing the bill during the election, a state-sponsored optional program could actually benefit former offenders, because their whereabouts would be established at all times (so if they were falsely accused, they could potentially demonstrate their innocence) and because the positioning devices may serve as a deterrent. A mandatory program, on the other hand, has the effect of punishing people who have already been punished according to their crime by violating their right to privacy.


Beyond that, it's easy enough for someone to falsify personal information and obtain an account that would not immediately identify them as a sex offender if indeed they are. Holding social networking sites responsible for viewing literally every page on their sites and knowing the identities of all sex offenders well enough to determine if a page is "associated" with them, regardless of purported identity, is absurd.


Perhaps you disagree? Comments, as always, are welcome.

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4 Comments:

At January 22, 2007 5:01 PM , Jennifer said...

This makes me worried for a number of reasons, but one of the largest is the definition of social networking sites, and also how they'll use this legislation if it gets passed. It's one thing to use it for sex offenders. It's another to use it to prosecute bloggers, writers, etc for copyrighted information. Think of how it could affect sites like GoogleVideo or YouTube, which rely heavily on user-submitted content.

 
At January 22, 2007 5:02 PM , Elaina said...

I agree...I don't even know how this is possible. Wait...does this mean the government is going to take out all the fun of the internet?

 
At January 22, 2007 5:02 PM , Jennifer said...

It sure sounds like it. Awww, man.

 
At January 22, 2007 5:02 PM , Lanier said...

Hey, I got mentioned!

I think this is mainly sound and fury for political ends. McCain's probably trying to drum up support from a more conservative base for his presidential run, and this'll be a little proposal he'll be able to tout to present himself as a moral watchdog when he's speaking to them, but he'll slip it under the run when he's talking to moderates.

I, like Clara, don't have a problem with legistlation targeting copyrighted info. I'd like to get paid for my creative work at some point, and that probably depends on their being continued value in attaching that little C with a date after it to my works. YouTube/Google (since they're now one and the same) already police their sites for copyrighted materials b/c existing laws make them resposible for it. Also, YouTube (while it was still independent) made some deals to allow it to show approved copyrighted materials. Here's details:

Link

On that front, $300,000 sounds like a shit load of money, but it could be a reasonable if, say, somebody got an advance copy of a soon-to-be-released film and put it up in its entirety before the movie was released in theaters.

Also, user-developed content that doesn't appropriate copyrighted materials (at least not without meeting 'fair use' standards) wouldn't be affected at all. Of course, if things get bad enough that YouTube has to pre-screen everything, that'd probably put them out of business unless they figure out a good tech solution (which the article suggests they're working on).

Policing comments sections seems ridiculous, though - I can't figure out how that's reasonable. And the third plank should be requiring social networking sites to remove profiles only of people who are attempting to lure underage kids. Of course, figuring out how to define 'attempting' there is a bit tricky, but I'd imagine there's an existing legal definition somewhere that might cover it.

I don't think there's much chance they'll be serious vote on this, but if there is I'll definitely do some letter writing.

Geez, I write long comments here.

 

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