Terrorism lawsuits threaten lawful speech: 2018 in review

As well-intentioned as these cases are, they pose a threat to the online communities we all rely on. In seeking to hold online platforms liable for what terrorists and their supporters post online—and the violence they ultimately perpetrate—such lawsuits threaten Internet users’ and the platforms’ First Amendment rights. They also jeopardize one of the Internet’s most important laws, Section 230 (47 U.S.C.§ 230).

Section 230 protects online platforms, in part, from civil lawsuits based on content created or posted by their users. The law is largely responsible for the creation and continued availability of a plethora of online forums and services that host a diverse array of user speech, ensuring that all views—even controversial ones—can be shared and heard. Section 230 lets anyone—regardless of resources, technical expertise, or geography—communicate with others around the world.

Despite Section 230 barring all civil claims for hosting user-generated content, if the lawsuits brought under the Anti-Terrorism Act succeed in imposing liability on the social media companies, they would open up a huge exception to Section 230 and undermine its legal protections for all online platforms.

That would have dire repercussions: if online platforms no longer have Section 230 immunity for hosting content even remotely related to terrorism, those forums and services will take aggressive action to screen their users, review and censor content, and potentially prohibit anonymous speech. The end result would be sanitized online platforms that would not permit discussion and research about terrorism, a prominent and vexing political and social issue.

Although federal trial courts and one appellate court have largely avoided undermining Section 230 and Internet users’ First Amendment rights, they have not entirely shut the door on these types of lawsuits. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, for example, missed a clear opportunity to rule that Section 230 bars these types of lawsuits.

That’s why EFF this year filed two friend-of-the-court briefs in cases before the United States Courts of Appeals for the Second and Sixth Circuits arguing that the courts should rule that Section 230 and the First Amendment prevent lawsuits under the Anti-Terrorism Act that seek to hold online platforms liable for content posted by their users—even if some of those users are pro-terrorism or terrorists themselves.

We hope that the courts vindicate Section 230 and the First Amendment in these material support cases. We will continue to monitor these cases and stand up for Internet users’ rights.

Aaron Mackey is Staff Attorney at the EFF. This article is published courtesy of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).