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June 4, 2019 08:21 pm PDT

European legal official OKs orders that force Facebook to globally remove insults to politicians like "oaf" and "fascist" (as well as synonyms)

Austria has incredibly broad libel laws -- so broad that they prohibit disgruntled voters from calling politicians "oafs" or "fascists." Predictably, this gave rise to a legal dispute between an Austrian politician and Facebook, when the former ordered the latter to remove a comment containing these two insults, and the whole mess ended up before the Advocate General of the Court of Justice of the EU -- a person whose decisions are not binding, but are incredibly legally influential.

The Advocate General not only ruled that Facebook can be ordered to block insults to politicians globally (that is, insults to Austrian politicians will not be visible anywhere in the world), but also ruled that Facebook can be ordered to monitor a specific users' communications to ensure that they don't repeat or restate the remarks using synonymous terms, and that Facebook can also be ordered to monitor every user's account to block them from repeating the insults verbatim.

This isn't just a bonkers decision, it's emblematic of a bonkers process, as Daphne Keller writes on Twitter: "Thats doubly problematic when as in every intermediary liability case the court hears only from (1) the person harmed by online expression and (2) the platform but NOT (3) the users whose rights to seek and impart information are at stake. That's an imbalanced set of inputs. On the massively important question of how filters work, the AG is left to triangulate between what plaintiff says, what Facebook says, and what some government briefs say. Read the rest


Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/0gsJA7MXCpw/fragile-fascist-oaf.html

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