• Sigilos@ttrpg.network
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    1 day ago

    Since the text of this bill almost exclusively “strikes” sections of other, preexisting legislation, I can’t quite tell what it really does without trying to locate and read each of the other pieces of legislation. Does anyone have a quick summery of what effect this proposal would have if passed?

    • Sigilos@ttrpg.network
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      1 day ago

      Answering my own question, it seems that “Sunset acts” are a common occurrence in legislation that end programs and activities that have more or less run their course or stopped being effective or meaningful.

      The reason this Sunset Act is being mentioned is…

      Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act was created to protect early internet platforms from lawsuits over user-generated content, a safeguard widely seen as essential to the internet’s development. As social media companies have become some of the nation’s most powerful and influential corporations, critics have questioned whether that protection should remain.

      … so my understanding is that this Sunset will remove some outdated protections from social media platforms, effectively forcing them to adapt with better policies and practices or open themselves up to litigation.

      • Faildini@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        “Outdated” is pretty debatable. The fear is that once platforms are legally liable for user posted content it will lead to an environment of censorship. Anything the federal government (or indeed private entities) don’t want talked about, they can simply tell social media companies to take down. Chances are the companies will comply because they don’t want to deal with the potential consequences of litigation.

        • Sigilos@ttrpg.network
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          5 hours ago

          This is why I asked if anyone could clarify for me. Thank you for explaining in a more natural manor, the language used to write these proposals is often confusing for me.

          With your clarification, it definitely seems to me like the protections in place should stay there. Maybe there are issues with some of these companies, but I don’t think removing these particular protections will change the issues I see, just stifle open speech.

      • Naia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        12 hours ago

        The fuck you mean “outdated”? That prevision is not a “social media” thing, it’s a “any platform that hosts user generated content” thing.

        It’s the only thing that even allows user generated content in the first place. It would effectively break any forum and even hosted chat applications because it would make the platform liable for anything their users do that breaks the law.

        But it also adds a bit of protection from BS lawsuits. Considering the current administration has already sued platforms because of users exercising their first amendment this provision insures they don’t actually have a case.

        And that’s related to all the platforms based in the US are currently getting strong armed to turn over personal information for any users that criticizes ICE.

        That is why they want to get rid of that provision. They want to censor people. They want to isolate people. It’s why they forced the sale of TikTok so they could crack down on political news they didn’t like while promoting propaganda.

        They want to get rid of these easy avenues of communication and information for the average person.

        Don’t get me wrong. Facebook, twitter, and the like need to be regulated and broken up under antitrust, but getting rid of this provision is not going to do any of that. It’s just going to make them crack down on people’s freedom of speech even more while still allowing hate speech.

        • Sigilos@ttrpg.network
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          5 hours ago

          This is exactly why I asked if anyone could clarify for me, I didn’t understand what was really being put on the political table here. Thank you for elucidating, the language used to write these proposals is often confusing for me. I understand that’s often done purposely by the people submitting such legislation, so I usually have to find someone who can understand it better then I can.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        effectively forcing them to adapt with better more expensive and difficult to implement policies and practices

        It’s the “Oops, Everything Is Facebook Now” Act. Squeezing out competition through threats of litigation.

    • Cantaloupe@lemmy.fedioasis.cc
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      1 day ago

      I uploaded the PDF into Gemini 3 pro

      The PDF itself was slow to obtain, the server took a long ass time to load the PDF.

      Show AI Summary

      Based on the document provided, this bill—officially named the “Sunset Section 230 Act” (S. 3546)—is designed to completely repeal Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934.

      Here is exactly what the legislation does:

      Total Repeal: It permanently removes Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 230) from federal law.

      Delayed Implementation: The repeal is not immediate. The law includes a “sunset” delay, meaning the repeal will officially take effect exactly two years after the bill is enacted.

      Conforming Amendments: The vast majority of the bill is legal housekeeping. Because Section 230 is referenced in many other federal laws, this bill goes through the U.S. Code—including the Trademark Act, the Controlled Substances Act, copyright law (Title 17), and criminal code (Title 18)—to strike out any cross-references to Section 230.

      Definition Updates: It updates definitions in other laws that previously relied on Section 230. For example, it ensures that terms like “interactive computer service” and “Internet” are redefined or point to Section 223 of the Communications Act instead.

      In short, it removes the foundational liability shield for internet platforms and gives a two-year runway for the change to take effect.