Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by janrinok on Wednesday September 29 2021, @02:06PM   Printer-friendly

From: Techdirt

Content moderation is a can of worms. For Internet infrastructure intermediaries, it’s a can of worms that they are particularly poorly positioned to tackle. And yet Internet infrastructure elements are increasingly being called on to moderate content—content they may have very little insight into as it passes through their systems.

The vast majority of all content moderation happens on the “top” layer of the internet—such as social media and websites, places online that are the most visible to an average user. If a post violates a platform’s terms of service, the post is usually blocked or taken down. If a user continues to post content that violates a platform’s terms, then the user’s account is often suspended. These types of content moderation practices are increasingly understood by average Internet users.

Less often discussed or understood are the types of services facilitated via actors in the Internet ecosystem that both support and exist under the upper content layers of the Internet.

Many of these companies host content, supply cloud services, register domain names, provide web security, and many more features of what could be described as the plumbing services of the Internet. But instead of water and sewage, the Internet deals in digital information. In theory, these “infrastructure intermediaries” could moderate content, but for reasons of convention, legitimacy, and practicality they don’t usually do it on purpose.

However, some notable recent exemptions may be setting precedent.

Amazon Web Services removed Wikileaks from their system in 2010. Cloudflare kicked off the Daily Stormer. An Italian court ordered Cloudflare to remove a copyright infringing site. Amazon suspended hosting for Parler.

What does all this mean? Infrastructure may have the means to perform “content moderation,” but it is critical to consider the effects of this trend to prevent harming the Internet’s underlying architecture. In principle, Internet service providers, registries, cloud providers and other infrastructure intermediaries should be agnostic to the content which passes over their systems.

[...] Policymakers must consider the unintended impacts of content moderation proposals on infrastructure intermediaries. Legislating without due diligence to understand the impact on the unique role of these intermediaries could be detrimental to the success of the Internet, and an increasing portion of the global economy that relies on Internet infrastructure for daily life and work.

[...] Conducting impact assessments prior to regulation is one way to mitigate the risks. The Internet Society created the Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit to help policymakers and communities assess the implications of change—whether those are policy interventions or new technologies.

Policy changes that impact the different layers of the Internet are inevitable. But we must all ensure that these policies are well crafted and properly scoped to keep the Internet working and successful for everyone.

Austin Ruckstuhl is a Project & Policy Advisor at the Internet Society where he works on Internet impact assessments, defending encryption and supporting Community Networks as access solutions.

Should online content be controlled ? If yes, Is there a better way to censor online content and who should have the authority to do so ??


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Thursday September 30 2021, @03:46AM

    by Thexalon (636) on Thursday September 30 2021, @03:46AM (#1183020)

    There are a bunch of things you can actually measure to draw some conclusions about which politicians are actually good at governing like:
    - How many of their constituents are dying?
    - How many are experiencing disabling injuries or illnesses?
    - What is the change in the S&P 500 and other financial instruments?
    - How many of their constituents who want to work are unable to get a job?
    - How many of their constituents who want to work are unable to find work that makes use of their training?
    - How much do their constituents get paid for work, on average?
    - What are the reported profits of businesses in their jurisdiction?
    - How frequent are various forms of crimes? How many people are killed or permanently disabled due to crime? How much financial loss is there due to crime?
    - How many of people the politician hired were found guilty of criminal acts committed both before and during holding those positions?
    - How much money did the government in question spend annually?
    - How much of a surplus or deficit did the government in question have annually?
    - How many of their constituents are in poverty (unable to pay for basic physical needs like food and housing)?
    - How many of their constituents went bankrupt last year?
    - How many government personnel under their control were killed or injured in the line of duty?
    - What percentage of their constituents over age 12 are illiterate or innumerate?
    I'm sure you can think of some more you might use.

    How important each of those measurements is important to you is of course a matter of your own political priorities, and it's absolutely true that these measurements are going to be fuzzy and imperfect, but there are still very clear trends you can discover if you look into the numbers. Think of it this way: For any politician you have the power to vote for or against, you're one of their thousands of supervisors, and it's part of your job to evaluate their performance. As a competent supervisor, you don't only use metrics, but you sure as heck would look at them as a potential place to start your evaluation.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2