Ari Cohn Profile picture
May 11, 2021 29 tweets 9 min read Read on X
1/ Claremont continues to send its...uh...best (such as it is) with this rather flimsy and unserious piece from Larry Greenfield in @JewishJournal's 'The Speech Project.'

jewishjournal.com/commentary/336…
2/ Greenfield's piece, titled "Big Tech is Big Trouble," leads off with talk of Aristotle, tyranny, totalitarianism, fascist, communists, and China, which is how you can be sure that this will be a very rational, level-headed read.
3/ Sure enough, he segues directly into the so-called "Big 5" of tech companies who he calls "the new rulers of our information age."

It's hard to tell if he's complaining that companies are recording "voluntary actions and thoughts." The sentence is unclear in its purpose.
4/ But lo, a point that is well-taken! Greenfield is right: there are well-founded concerns, and important conversations to be had, about data collection and privacy. Unfortunately you can probably tell that this isn't what his piece is about.
5/ For someone who was just railing against the evils of communism, invoking "cyber capitalism" like this seems...odd. Also, what exactly does he mean by "incite" us? What exactly are tech companies inciting us to do?
6/ And now we get to his main gripe, which by now should be obvious is really that people don't get to say whatever they want on whatever website they want.
7/ Yes, Larry. Just like you are the arbiter of what may or may not be said in your house, the owners of websites likewise get to choose what to allow. That's how the whole private property thing works. And yes, PragerU lost that lawsuit because YouTube is not the government.
8/ Parler was kicked out of app stores and AWS because they didn't comply with their agreements with those companies. And guess what, it's back.

You know whose had a bit less of a tough time? Gab, which—whatever you think of it—smartly decided to host on its own servers.
9/ Here's where Greenfield gives up his game. His argument is fundamentally about having a right to...well whatever you *prefer* on someone's property, or a right to the audience assembled there.
10/ If Parler had not been booted and enjoyed high user acquisition, Greenfield would still not have been happy, because it doesn't matter if there's an alternative where you can speak freely. He wants to do it on his terms, on your property. Nothing less will suffice!
11/ Also it's laughable that he claims people are now unable to follow organizations and public figures that they want. There are plenty of ways to follow who you want, whether on other platforms, their individual websites, etc.
12/ More hysterics. You'd almost think Larry believes that the Facebook police is going to come take him away for a conversation he had with his neighbor on his front lawn.

And Larry, if there are at least five companies you're complaining about...it isn't a monopoly.
13/ I suppose when you're speaking to the audience Greenfield is, citing to Dershowitz seems like a good idea. But of course this is nonsense. There is no platform vs. publisher distinction in Section 230. Websites simply are not liable as publishers for user-generated content.
14/ That was a policy choice that takes into account the fact that the Internet is vastly more expansive than anything we've known, and that applying the same liability standards as "other media companies" would be senseless.
15/ Greenfield tries to cabin Section 230 by claiming it was only meant to allow for moderating certain types of content, which of course happens to be the ones he thinks are fine to be "censored."
16/ Query if Larry thinks that lying about the outcome of an election and convincing people it was stolen so that they mounted an insurrection at the capitol causes "irreparable harm to society."

My bet: it depends on the political party that did it!
17/ Now Greenfield gives six options for "addressing the abuse of free speech by Big Tech" with vanishing little substantive discussion, and more mindless repetition of things he read online somewhere.
18/ Does this actually *say* anything other than repeating the disinformation that a company doesn't get #Section230 protection if it isn't neutral?

Also how does "breaking up companies" or "large fines" enforce "repealing Section 230?" That doesn't make any sense whatsoever.
19/ Again, what?!? Here's why, Larry: Because this isn't 'Nam, there are rules. Namely, the laws that make it a civil rights violation for a physical place of public accommodation (which doesn't include websites, by the way) to discriminate on the basis of race.
20/ It's not "violative of civil rights" ("denial of equal access" is so meaningless that it's hard to reply to) to prevent someone from "joining a platform." But while we're on the subject, how can it be "the" modern town public square (lol) if there are several of them?
21/ Ye Olde Common Carrier is an argument that many latch on to and few understand. Websites aren't common carriers, and trying to force them to treat all speech equally would violate the First Amendment. See more here: lawfareblog.com/wall-street-jo… & here: lawfareblog.com/justice-thomas…\...\
22/ Of the five states Larry claims to have enacted legislation, only *one* actually has, and it has nothing to do with "big tech censorship." Utah & North Dakota killed their bills, Florida's hasn't been signed, and Texas hasn't passed anything yet. This is just sloppy. Yikes.
23/ Never mind the fact that Section 230 preempts all of the state laws that try to create liability for how websites moderate content. I'm guessing Larry has never read Section 230. But that's just a guess.
24/ This is breathtaking. The Fairness Doctrine applied to telegraph, telephones, and cable? No it certainly didn't. The kicker: Greenfield founded the Reagan Legacy Foundation! So he has no idea what the Fairness Doctrine was, and seems to be unaware that Reagan's FCC killed it!
25/ And no, social media companies are not broadcasters. The Fairness Doctrine applied to broadcast spectrum licensees. It was constitutional only because broadcast spectrum is a scarce and publicly-owned resource. The Fairness Doctrine could not be applied to websites.
26/ Leaving aside the fact that Citizens United didn't create the concept of corporations having First Amendment rights (we already know Greenfield doesn't have a clue), yes--competition is the answer. How exactly does Larry think they aren't freely competing?
27/ We end as we began. This article is a bunch of uneducated and patently and demonstrably false nonsense sandwiched between paragraphs of hysteria.

I hope there wasn't any editorial oversight by @JewishJournal because if there was, it sure didn't involve substance.
I can't get over this one. The jump from "if a restaurant can't refuse a black person service" to "therefore it's a civil rights violation for a social media company to ban any user" is just exquisitely moronic.
Oh wait, I almost forgot the part where he goes the for long jump record, wondering if social media content moderation will lead to the *government* throwing people in jail for speech.

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More from @AriCohn

Jan 31
Senate Judiciary is having a hearing today on "Big Tech and the Online Child Sexual Exploitation Crisis," in which senators will yell at a bunch of social media platform CEOs and likely say some very wrong things. Follow along in this thread, if you dare.

judiciary.senate.gov/committee-acti…
2/ Durbin kicks off by showing a video from victims of online CSE and their parents. Undeniably horrible stories, and if the hearing really focuses exclusively on platform efforts to combat CSE/CSAM, I'll be on board--platforms SHOULD be doing more.

But that's unlikely.
3/ And not for nothing, Durbin's STOP CSAM Act swings the pendulum too far, threatening end-to-end encryption and incentivizing takedowns of lawful content and campaigns of false reporting. EFF has a good explainer: eff.org/deeplinks/2023…
Read 111 tweets
Aug 8, 2023
1/ I must respectfully take issue with this piece, for a few reasons.

First, as a normative matter, to mee it comes too close to equating the harms of CSAM with the effects of minors looking at porn. Whatever you think about the latter, the former is *inestimably* worse.
2/ Second, the "secondary effects doctrine" is a heaping MESS that gives government an end-run around the First Amendment, even for non-porn speech. Expanding it to the online world rather than physical locations would be terrible.

SED should be retired, not broadened.
3/ Third, there is no distinction between the age verification mandates being proposed now, and the ones struck down in the Great COPA Wars, practically or constitutionally.

The curtailment was in fact being forced to verify your identity before accessing disfavored content. Image
Read 14 tweets
Jun 30, 2023
1/ So @MiamiSeaquarium, which tortures Orcas by keeping them in confined spaces, have filed suit because Phil published drone pictures and criticized them.

It's evident that they didn't like being criticized, and are trying to shut him up.

Complaint: https://t.co/EwdXgkcQOvtinyurl.com/muhbjzr7
2/ I'm no expert in Bird Law, so the claims involving drones are not in my wheelhouse.

But @MiamiSeaquarium also alleged defamation (a good indicator of SLAPPiness)--kind of.

It seems that their lawyers are not entirely competent. This is the entirety of the defamation count:
@MiamiSeaquarium 3/ This is plainly a deficient pleading. Why?

Because notice what's missing: any identification of the allegedly defamatory statements.

You can't just waltz into court and say "they said defamatory things." You have to actually say what those things were.
Read 8 tweets
Jun 16, 2023
1/ On Wednesday @TechFreedomfiled an amicus brief with the 6th Circuit in Johnson v. @kathygriffin.

Our PR and the brief can be found here: techfreedom.org/protect-intern…

In case you're unfamiliar with the litigation, let me refresh your memory & explain why it's important.
2/ In April 2021, a video started circulating on social media showing a man accosting a teen taking pre-prom pictures with his boyfriend at a hotel restaurant, because the teen was wearing a dress.

Super normal stuff.

When Kathy saw the video, she tweeted about it a few times.
3/ In her first tweet, she identified the man as Sam Johnson, and noted that he worked at VisuWell, a telehealth software company from what I gather.

A couple tweets later, VisuWell announced Johnson's firing. Griffin asked if he was going to remain on the board. They said no.
Read 27 tweets
May 24, 2023
Oh hey, did you know that you can wreck a @Target display and doing that enough will get them to pull the products you're vandalizing about? Image
The War on Christmas is gonna be EPIC this year. Get ready, @Target!
@AskTarget how many people, exactly, need to trash your terrible produce section before you cede ground and stop trying to sell mushy apples?
Read 4 tweets
May 21, 2023
I'm sorry that you don't believe that people accused of crimes deserve legal representation and for the state to prove their case--kind of a fundamental principle that this country was founded on.

Someone here is "scum," but it's not who you think.

Maybe move to Qatar.
Seems @wontbackdown83 deleted his original tweet so that he could turn off replies. Very brave man.
He didn't even last 20 minutes. Sad. Image
Read 5 tweets

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