At TechDirt, Mike Masnick reports on the feminist fanatic who wants to destroy the internet as we know it. Mary Anne Franks, who interned under Catharine MacKinnon, has also attacked porn —
My own representative in Congress, Jackie Speier, has apparently decided to introduce a federal “revenge porn” bill, which is being drafted, in part, by Prof. Mary Anne Franks, who has flat out admitted that her goal is to undermine Section 230 protections for websites (protecting them from liability of actions by third parties) to make them liable for others’ actions. Now, I’ve never written about Franks before, but the last time I linked to a story about her in a different post, she went ballistic on Twitter, attacking me in all sorts of misleading ways. So, let me just be very clear about this. Here’s what she has said:
“The impact [of a federal law] for victims would be immediate,” Franks said. “If it became a federal criminal law that you can’t engage in this type of behavior, potentially Google, any website, Verizon, any of these entities might have to face liability for violations.”
That makes it clear her intent is to undermine Section 230 and make third parties — like “Google, any website, Verizon… face liability.”
Now, her retort to all of this is likely that she’s not seeking to undermine Section 230 in any way. Rather, she’s attempting to do something of an end-run around it. Section 230 has never protected sites from liability of federal crimes — just civil infractions and state crimes. So her goal is to make the amorphous concept of “revenge porn” a “federal crime” thereby suddenly making third-party websites liable. She will argue that does nothing to undermine Section 230. A more reasoned and thoughtful look at the issue, however, shows how this effort is fraught with dangerous consequences and potential First Amendment problems.
Criminalize websites and ISP’s? Read more…
More on Mary Anne Franks and her pet revenge porn law.
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