Sad: Why Haven't Other Internet Companies Stood Up For Craigslist Against AGs?
from the take-a-stand dept
For quite some time now, we've been covering how various state attorneys general have been publicly grandstanding and threatening Craigslist, despite no actual legal basis. That grandstanding, of course, has "worked." It's resulted in Craigslist settling twice, and now shutting down the adult services section, leading those ads to migrate elsewhere actually helping those responsible, and making it harder for law enforcement to do its job. In testimony to Congress, Craigslist is pointing out that many of those other sites are not nearly as willing to help law enforcement.But there's another issue here. As Ryan Singel points out, this grandstanding campaign is really an attack on the rather important Section 230 safe harbors for online service providers. Richard Blumenthal, who has led the attack, despite a lack of jurisdiction or legal basis is currently running for Senate, and apparently is interested in changing Section 230. Singel asked Blumenthal first under what legal theory Craigslist was liable, and got back vague claims of how its failure to enforce its terms of service violated Connecticut consumer protection laws -- an incredibly weak claim unlikely to stand up to any scrutiny. But, more seriously, Singel asked about Section 230, and Blumenthal said the law "is outdated and needs revision."
"I support changes clarifying and strengthening the law to hold websites accountable when they knowingly enable or promote illegal activity."Beware that "enable." Blumenthal wants to expand massive liability to internet services in a manner that would kill off significant innovation. Could you enable illegal activity via Google, Facebook, Twitter, Skype or many other popular internet services? You bet. Section 230 is designed to make sure the liability actually went to those responsible, not to the service providers and tools they used. Changing that is incredibly dangerous for innovation.
And, yet, as Single points out, these other companies haven't stepped up to support Craigslist in the grandstanding against them. Of course, the PR reasons are clear: no one wants to be in a position where critics could twist their words and misleadingly and falsely claim they "support" exploitation. But this is a big deal and in keeping quiet, bad things may happen:
The logical extension of what Blumenthal & Co say they want is a world where even they couldn't use Facebook, Twitter and Flickr to connect with their constituents, for fear that one of them (or their political enemies) would plant incriminating material they could then be sued over.Singel also points out, as we have in the past, that the key point of grandstanding these days is on the revenue Craigslist made from these ads -- something that only started when these very same AGs forced Craigslist to start charging for the ads as part of an earlier settlement.
And even if they were successful, and didn't care about that consequences, would ads for prostitution disappear from the face of the earth? Not likely. The same ads that Craigslist is pilloried for dominate the back pages of alternative weeklies. The printed Yellow Pages carries ads for "Escort Services." You can find them in the Village Voice-owned Backpages.com. And beyond the media world, it's not very hard to find "Massage" parlors in any major U.S. city, where I'd venture to guess, you are more likely to find human-trafficking than you were anywhere on Craigslist. And back in the relative shadows from whence they came would only exploiters of women and children would only have more power.
The collateral damage of a wrong-headed pursuit Craigslist is an assault on the open internet itself.
Singel wants to know why other internet companies aren't speaking up. Because the end result of letting Craigslist hang on its own on this topic is going to come back to haunt them. Already, in the same Congressional hearings today where Craigslist was attacked, those who pushed this damaging situation on the company are sharpening their knives for other internet companies:
"Every pimp has a MySpace page," Frundt testified, adding that ads also show up on Backpages.com. "Every john uses a john board and posts information on where to buy children."Indeed! We absolutely must do something -- but the something we should do is use these tools to go after and stop those actually responsible rather than pushing them around the internet, and blaming the tools they use. That doesn't stop the activity. It doesn't protect the exploited. It doesn't help the situation. It creates a false target, and a situation in which the very principles on which the internet has been built get undermined, at a potentially huge cost to innovation, communication and free speech.
"This has been going on for many years. We must do something about our children being sold on the internet."
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Filed Under: grandstanding, innovation, richard blumenthal, section 230
Companies: craigslist, facebook, google, myspace, twitter
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Since when have you supported anyone labeled a "terrorist"?
Specifically, WHEN do corporations ever defend others? It's dog eat dog, devil take the hindmost, how can I profit from gov't action, buzzards moving in to eat what the hyenas leave.
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More grandstaning on today's deliberations
I will say this, Craigslist's attorney (Ms. Dolan?) was very good in stating some good points during the hearing when she got her opportunities. Kudos to her for standing up to the bully pulpit.
Watching these hearings reminded me of the disappointment we call elected officials ;)
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Like that would happen.
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Subject
No doubt whomever is attacking Craigslist must have a financial reason for doing so. I would not be surprised if these "organizations" that are going after Craigslist are being secretly funded by LARGE corporations that are somehow benefiting by creating precedences and by sending new business to them.
No doubt some corporation has an ulterior motive and has sent out the dogs to go in attack so that attention can be created and laws will be changed. I think those that are grandstanding and creating attention just so happens to be on the same side of the issues that would serve to benefit the large media corporations. Coincidence? I think not. This is a very carefully orchestrated move created by the media corporations.
They won't stop here. This is just a smaller part in a very big picture. In very tiny steps, the corporations have pecked and chipped away at very small parts of our laws, privacy, rights and freedoms. It's like chess...move your smaller pieces slowly to take over the entire board. This tactic works and they have their favourite politicians that help them out. If they don't have their politicians in certain places of power...they create and move them in there.
So, let's just say that in the future...all web sites and data-related corporations are legally responsible for the actions of their users. Just imagine how quickly this would stifle innovation and destroy peoples faith in the internet. Perhaps this is just a another step in the "big picture"...to control consumers, to stifle innovation and technlogy. Afterall without the internet, how can people pirate...right?
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Chipping Away at Our Rights
Win at any cost.
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You are a genius who thinks so clearly about he big picture.
NOT!
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Look at the big picture
Craigslist has more sex industry ads around the world, and in the US, than any other entity.
Craigslist's sex industry ads are just a click away from where a child might go to shop for a used bicycle.
Craigslist has been making millions of dollars on these ads.
Craigslist promised to use the money they made on these ads to clean it up, but they didn't. State AGs are not happy about being duped.
Those going after Craigslist are not big corps. They are dozens and dozens of small nonprofits who fight for women's rights, children's rights, etc.
If you don't buy trafficked children on Craigslist, it might seem strange that they are being "singled out." But if you are a trafficker, or a formerly trafficked person, or a john, you will know that Craigslist has been rightfully chosen as THE target for cleaning up trafficking. They're the goliath of human trafficking worldwide, the largest red light district in the world.
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Or, at least, one member of society.
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Re: Look at the big picture, NOT
Pornography and sexual solicitation is always just one click away on the Internet.
Craigslist makes money from advertising and not directly from any ads.
Craigslist is moderated by the users, feel free to flag offending posts yourself. This is a community driven sight and you are portraying them as something they are not.
Big corporations are most certainly after Craigslist. Hell they have practically destroyed classified ads in newspapers. They have also taken a big chunk out of Ebay.
If Craigslist disappeared tomorrow it would have zero effect on human trafficking and underage prostitution.
What in the hell was your point again? Oh yeah, just slander a great community tool that has made a huge positive difference in millions of people's life because your "protecting" the children.
Be wary of anyone who claims to protect the children, they are liars and deceivers that have their own twisted agenda.
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This Blumenthal guy, he knows what's-what. I'm sure once this business with Craigslist is over, he'll go after ice pick manufacturers next. I sure hope so.
For the children.
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Re: Look at the big picture
Porn sites are just a click away from...every single site on the internet. OH NO SHUT DOWN THE INTERNET NOW!!!!!
"Craigslist has been making millions of dollars on these ads."
Oh, good, thank you for proving to everyone that you are completely ignorant of the subject you are discussing. The only reason Craigslist has been making money on the ads is because the same grandstanding AGs *MADE THEM START CHARGING MONEY.* Oh, and the money is donated to charities and organizations that help the exploited.
But why let facts get in the way of your (false) moral outrage? Facts have a known anti-ignorance bias, after all.
"They are dozens and dozens of small nonprofits who fight for women's rights, children's rights, etc."
How exciting. There are also "dozens and dozens" (your number is made up, unsurprisingly, so I just used the same one) of similar nonprofits who rightly realize that shutting down a tool will do less than nothing to help women and children, and will in fact make it easier for them to be exploited.
Now, can you please throw your computer out the window so I don't have to have my brain cells murdered by your infectious stupidity? After all, computers are used to exploit children, and you wouldn't want to support child exploitation, right?
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Craigslist
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It's the incredible misunderstanding of basic issues found in the comment above that bug me the most.
No, no one said that Craigslist can do whatever they wish. But you seem extremely confused over who is doing what. Craigslist is the platform provider. Users are the ones posting the content, and no, it's not legal for them to post content that breaks the law. The point is making sure that it's THEM -- the people who actually break the law -- who are dealt with, rather than the tool provider.
No one has ever said that Craigslist or any other company can "do whatever they wish." We're just saying that blaming Craigslist for actions of its users -- as you have done -- is a huge mistake.
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Re: Look at the big picture
What does that have to do with blaming Craigslist rather than its users?
Craigslist's sex industry ads are just a click away from where a child might go to shop for a used bicycle.
Welcome to the internet. Seriously, though, how many kids are trolling CL for sex industry ads?
Craigslist has been making millions of dollars on these ads.
As explained in the post, the ONLY reason CL is making revenue from these ads is because the same AGs forced them to start charging. You don't get to bitch and complain about the crap you forced CL to do. CL is famous for not charging for the vast majority of its listings. To claim that CL is just doing this for money is totally ignorant.
Hell, back when CL did this for free, the complaint was that anyone could post such an ad without a cc. It's tough to take people serious when they make arguments as weak as this.
Those going after Craigslist are not big corps. They are dozens and dozens of small nonprofits who fight for women's rights, children's rights, etc.
And that makes it better that they're making the situation WORSE? Ugh. How clueless can you be? CL was HELPING law enforcement deal with the ACTUAL problem. But pushing this stuff off CL makes it harder, meaning that more women and children will get exploited.
If you don't buy trafficked children on Craigslist, it might seem strange that they are being "singled out." But if you are a trafficker, or a formerly trafficked person, or a john, you will know that Craigslist has been rightfully chosen as THE target for cleaning up trafficking. They're the goliath of human trafficking worldwide, the largest red light district in the world.
And rather than actually dealing with those responsible, you've just helped make that harder.
Proud of yourself? You just made it that much harder to help exploited women and children.
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The same goes for gun manufacturers, all those vehicle manufacturers, why, all those cars keep killing people! How do they sleep at night?
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But never mind some day someone will go after them too.
Some idiots get empowered when other don't care or say nothing, and so they will continue to do so until they find themselves in hot waters, which it will come to pass eventually.
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Grandstanding To Avoid Real Law Enforcement
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Wastes of Money
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I agree with that--to a point.
Once Craigslist has specific knowledge that their service is being used for illegal activity, they lose their shield under 47 U.S.C. 230. Knowing about illegal activity and turning a blind eye while you profit off of it just doesn't seem right to me. You could make a great argument that at some point Craigslist is knowingly aiding and abetting in prostitution. Section 230 only protects them so far. It's not a blanket license to profit from crime like you seem to think.
I really wouldn't call the AG's arguments baseless. Grandstanding perhaps, but not without merit.
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Re: Look at the big picture
Bulls__t! Look at Topix's Human Sexuality Forum who TechDirt defends:
http://www.topix.com/forum/news/sex
These forums are LOADED with child predators, incest, abuse, its insane. Take a look around and see what TechSugar is protecting while Craigslist gets smeared.
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topix
Daughters watching dads masterbating
Make love to my mom?
how can i ask my mom to allow me to drink her milk.
Youngest One You Licked Or Youngest When You Were Licked?
Want to f$$k my step daughter
and on and on and on.
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Let me get this straight ...
So, if I respond to a Blog post by somebody and I embed links to an illegal activity or a site not approved of by Richard B., that would also count would it not? After all, didn't the web site owner "knowingly" give me that ability? I guess this means that TechDirt is at risk because they "knowingly" let people post their comments which may contain illegal activity or a link to illegal activity.
I guess this also means that the web site of the Republicans (http://www.gop.com) would also be at risk as they let people post comments to Blog entries that have been posted. Is this another example of not thinking through the consequences of an action?
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Whether or not shutting down the erotic section of Craigslist does anything to help the problem is debatable. I certainly see Mike's point there. I'm not convinced that the good from shutting it down doesn't outweigh the bad. Maybe it does, maybe it doesn't. I don't know.
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Not true.
True under the DMCA safe harbors. Not under 230. There is no liability once you know.
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(e) Effect on other law
(1) No effect on criminal law
17 U.S.C.A. § 230
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math
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