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Karr writes: "Think you have the right to speak freely via cellphones, websites and social media? Well, the companies that provide you with access to the Internet don't."

Verizon's motto: 'We Rule the Air.' (photo: Verizon)
Verizon's motto: 'We Rule the Air.' (photo: Verizon)



Freedom = Censorship?

By Timothy Karr, Media Citizen

14 July 12

 

hink you have the right to speak freely via cellphones, websites and social media? Well, the companies that provide you with access to the Internet don't.

The framers drafted the First Amendment as a check on government authority - not corporate power. But whether we're texting friends, sharing photos on Facebook, or posting updates on Twitter, we're connecting with each other and the Internet via privately controlled networks.

And the owners of these networks are now twisting the intent of the First Amendment to claim the right to control everyone's online information.

Right before the Fourth of July, Verizon filed a brief with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that expressed this intent in no uncertain terms. The brief was part of the telecom company's bid to overturn the Federal Communications Commission's Net Neutrality rules, which prohibit carriers from blocking or discriminating against Internet users' content.

In the brief, Verizon argues that the First Amendment gives the company the right to serve as the Internet's editor-in-chief.

The First Amendment "protects those transmitting the speech of others, and those who ‘exercise editorial discretion' in selecting which speech to transmit and how to transmit it," the company's attorneys wrote. "In performing these functions, broadband providers possess ‘editorial discretion.' Just as a newspaper is entitled to decide which content to publish and where, broadband providers may feature some content over others."

By "content" Verizon means all digital communications that cross its wires, from photographs of your cousin's backyard barbeque to YouTube videos of human rights violations in Syria.

Verizon filed its brief quietly just before the July Fourth holiday, but it has caught the attention of the Internet freedom community like a skunk under the back porch.

This is not the first time Internet Service Providers (ISPs) have suggested that they have a First Amendment right to stifle speech online. AT&T argued in 2010 that its role is similar to that of an editor who selects content and speaks - and that it is not merely a conduit for the communications of others.

This defense of corporate censorship is no idle threat but a pretext for a full-scale takeover of the Internet - a move that first requires killing off any consumer protections that stand in the way.

We live in a time when growing numbers of people watch television programs, listen to music, create videos and share photographs via Internet connections provided by private entities.

A 2011 report from European Digital Rights states that ISPs and other technology companies are fast becoming the information cops of the world. The report paints a picture of an emerging "censorship ecosystem" fueled by private entities that often work hand in glove with governments.

This collusion serves both corporate and political interests. ISPs are seeking new authority to interfere with user traffic, including limiting access to the content of competitors like Netflix or shutting down the accounts of users they charge with sharing too much media. Governments are demanding that access providers help them filter and police the Internet - and that they do so under a veil of secrecy.

The most dangerous threats to free speech today lie at this intersection between corporate and political power. While businesses might do many things better than governments, our government is at least by definition directly accountable to the American people. So when Verizon claims the right to decide who gets free speech on the Internet, it's making this claim as a benevolent despot, not as a representative democracy.

The framers of the U.S. Constitution could not have foreseen a time in which technology allowed more than a billion people to communicate via mobile phones connected to the World Wide Web. Nor could they have envisioned a world in which companies like Verizon, AT&T and Comcast wield more authority over our free speech than a British monarch.

And yet the First Amendment has survived to this day in defense of democracy's most consequential right. People on both the left and right value freedom of speech. Just days after Verizon filed its brief, a diverse coalition of more than 1,000 groups and Internet dignitaries joined together behind a Declaration of Internet Freedom that establishes freedom of expression as its first principle.

But popular consensus behind free speech on the Internet is running headlong into media giants like Verizon that want to suppress open Internet culture.

Any claim that the First Amendment protects corporations - and not people - is absurd. And it shows just how far some companies are willing to go to control 21st century communications.

 

Comments   

We are concerned about a recent drift towards vitriol in the RSN Reader comments section. There is a fine line between moderation and censorship. No one likes a harsh or confrontational forum atmosphere. At the same time everyone wants to be able to express themselves freely. We'll start by encouraging good judgment. If that doesn't work we'll have to ramp up the moderation.

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- The RSN Team

 
+11 # KrazyFromPolitics 2012-07-14 22:03
The forces coming together to control our every conversation, movement, thought, ad infinitum is one of the most frightening processes that I have lived through. More so, than the fearful times during the "Cold War", including the Cuban Missile Crisis. That event threatened our physical well being. The current coup d'etat threatens our physical well being and our soul.

What is maddening is so many Americans sitting on their collective asses in an electronic stupor playing games or watching innocuous TV shows with no seeming awareness of what is happening. The 99% who vote Republican seem to have Stockholm Syndrome, identifying with their captors, who are laughing at the peons. I suppose that is the illusion that fascism is designed to create. This, in no way exonerates The Democratic Party. They are culpable in their participation, and lack of wall street, and banker prosecutions. Add their pathetic silence to right wing obstruction, and we are voiceless.

If we lose freedom of the internet our communication will be effectively cut, and destroy what unity and solidarity we still have. The confluence of money, religious fervor, corporations, and Machiavellian leaders is more dangerous to our security than any outside threat, short of an extinction event.
 
 
+2 # ghostperson 2012-07-15 22:00
I share every feeling you articulated. However, I add one element to the equation: the game playing-6th grade level TV watchers are the direct product of the war on education and learning. It is no accident that education funding is under attack or that teachers are being targeted and scapegoated. Un- and undereducated masses who struggle to meet survival needs are the exact population the 1% want Americans to be. That way they don't even have to go to the trouble or expense to outsource manufacturing or jobs. They have a suitable underclass here in the U.S. of A. Education is the seed corn of society. Decimate it and only the elite thrive.
 
 
+2 # ghostperson 2012-07-15 22:26
Talk about Alice through the looking glass.

Corporate money is protected free speech. But citizens' expressing themselves need a self-appointed filter?

How long will it before we are all back in our basements with earphones and radios just to extricate ourselves from corporate control. Ours is the only non-pecuniary, incentive position. We want the right to be left alone with our thoughts and voices.

Since U.S. leadership is owned by corporations, our ersatz elected representatives have no incentive to break ranks. Citizens simply want an end to corporate domination of every feature of our lives. Corporations control government. Corporations control economic policy and what we hear and see in the media. Corporations are literally the way Lainie Kazan describe wives in "Big Fat Greek Wedding." Men may be the head of the family but wives are the neck and they can turn the head anyway they want. Corporations are the neck.

I go to Mexico for 2-3 weeks every June where I am unplugged. I cannot describe to you the gloriousness of what it is like not to be the object of a constant bombardment of propaganda for an extended period. It is bad enough to be pawns of corporate America but no one stops to consider the pent up and building anxiety relentless negative messages have on peoples' psyches. I have found that it is better to read news than hear and see the cacophony of talking heads looping hysterical negativity 24/7.
 
 
+2 # Montague 2012-07-15 00:20
Yes, it stinks. But we should be aware that any site where we write comments can block or censor those comments at will. Even RSN, one of the best sites around and thankfully not beholden to anyone, has vague guidelines and can cut stuff it likes.
 
 
+6 # rockieball 2012-07-15 04:54
Another reason not to privatize the post office. They are government run and thus cannot read your mail. These corporations are saying that you can say what you want but criticize us, what we do, who we support and how much we charge even in a private person to person message and we have the right to drop you. Replies like this one would be cause for my server to disable my account.
 
 
+2 # RMDC 2012-07-15 04:55
Free speech was always intended to protect citizens from controls on political expression by governments. It has never had any implications for corporate controls on expression, opinions, or thought. We are in new territory. There are supreme court rulings that say one does not have free speech rights on corporate property, such as shopping malls. they can prevent political expresssion there.

As the internet gets more and more privitized, the rules of corporate private property will apply. Verizon will be able to tell everyone what is permissible to discuss and what is not. Generally, in a shopping mall it is legal to talk about shopping and consumption, not anything else. That is where the internet is heading.
 
 
+5 # ericlipps 2012-07-15 09:07
Quoting RMDC:
Free speech was always intended to protect citizens from controls on political expression by governments. It has never had any implications for corporate controls on expression, opinions, or thought. We are in new territory. There are Supreme Court rulings that say one does not have free speech rights on corporate property, such as shopping malls. they can prevent political expresssion there.

As the internet gets more and more privitized, the rules of corporate private property will apply. Verizon will be able to tell everyone what is permissible to discuss and what is not. Generally, in a shopping mall it is legal to talk about shopping and consumption, not anything else. That is where the internet is heading.


If it's constitutional for corporations to censor even political speech on the Internet, then it's time for a constitutional amendment to bring the Bill of Rights into the current century. Otherwise, business will happily assume the role of Big Brother which George Orwell assigned to government in "1984".
 
 
+2 # Capn Canard 2012-07-15 05:14
Up is down and black is white. The current Court has a majority of charlatans and we are all captured by these hucksters. Verizon and others have only one mandate and that is to make money, to create profit, and any benefit they may produce is a by product of their push for more profit. When the benefit runs out, I believe their next step is to extract profit directly from Government(We the People) without actually earning it. But we could by pass it all by redefining money and the monetary system. Eliminate money. We were creative enough to create it, I believe we are creative enough to replace it. Let's get to work!
 
 
+4 # John Locke 2012-07-15 06:11
THey don't have that right! If they can claim that right then they should not be immune from lawsuits for Defamation, they seem to want it both ways!
 
 
0 # paulrevere 2012-07-15 07:57
So, with that line of reason, I guess the water we drink can be manipulated by the Water Department at their will, after all they oversee all the pipes n pumps etc and the power companies can give or take as they see fit and the food companies can put anything they want in the food supply and bankers can play casino gamble with our money and...oh, sorry, they already do.

I don't mean to sound trite here...

The truth is that which is in the pipes BELONGS to those that put it there by right of production of that content...I have to take responsibility for it personally, so how can they OWN it too?

I'm sooooooo confuuuused...
 
 
+3 # JSRaleigh 2012-07-15 09:02
The corporate threat to ALL of our basic freedoms will not be overturned until something is done about the ridiculous idea that corporations are persons.

Senator Sanders proposed Constitutional Amendment does not go far enough because it only applies to for-profit corporations, and any fool can see how the laws governing non-profit organizations are abused to our disadvantage every day.
 
 
+4 # squinty 2012-07-15 13:05
The owner of a printing press can refuse to accept a print job for material he finds objectionable, whereas the government cannot tell him to print or refuse to print it. But I don't think ISP's are the equivalent of printing press owners in this example. I think John Locke has it pegged wrt liability for content: if the ISP can exercise editorial control over what is or is not viewed on the 'net, then they must accept liability for content. If they want to be free of liability, they must refrain from exercising editorial control.

I would think the value of their service would decline greatly if the web were no longer an open forum for speech.

There needs to be a sort of Glass-Steagall separating access providers from content creators. Doesn't seem likely though.

If the only speech you are allowed to exercise is shouting out your window or scratching with a quill pen, in a society where most speech and debate is carried electronically, are you still really free to speak?
 

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