News

U.S. SAFE TECH Act would be a game changer for internet accountability and advertising

A new bill introduced by Senate Democrats proposes to change Section 230, core U.S. legislation that shields social media and Internet providers from liability for publishing false or misleading information and from responsibility for the user content they publish. Section 230, which the New York Times quoted President Biden as saying should be “immediately revoked,” gives the Internet companies unique immunity not granted to publishers or other media. The SAFE TECH Act would make an exception “when the provider or user has accepted payment to make the speech available,” which would impact not only advertising but other kinds of paid services, including for premium web hosting. On the upside, the change would require more accountability from companies and would provide recourse to victims of cyberstalking and Internet harassment.

Note: I’m currently reading Jeff Kossoff’s excellent book, The Twenty-Six Words That Created the Internet, about Section 230 and its history.

More News

Previous Article

IT’S THE LAW (2/9/2021)

February 9, 2021

Virginia is now the second U.S. state to pass a comprehensive data privacy law. The Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act (VCDPA) provides consumers the right to know what data is being collected, to opt-out of collection and to refuse use of their information for targeting, profiling, or for sale. However, it does not give consumers private right of action, a choice that eased passage and may make it a model for other legislation.

CDPI Privacy Newsletter
Featured Article

Martech Spending Grows as Percentage of Marketing Budget: CMO Survey

April 26, 2024

Martech keeps taking larger bites out of marketing budgets: 17.3% last year, 19.9% this year, 23.5% next year, and 30.9% five years from now, according to the latest CMO Survey. This despite barely more than half (56.4%) of current tools being used and nearly half (48.8%) of the survey respondents reporting worse-than-expected results. Oddly enough, marketers rate selecting marketing technologies as the thing they do best.

CDPI Newsletter