| > Also, what do you think common carrier means? It doesn't mean "completely unmoderated" Systems such as the phone network are pretty darn unmoderated. It is mostly unmoderated, even if common carriers are allowed to do a small amount, of highly restricted moderation actions. > as you appear to believe I have just clarified. It means that there are very strong regulations, that ban many forms of moderation. > so why shouldn't they be allowed to perform moderation at the application layer? I am saying that I would be fine if they were banned from doing most moderation actions, as is the case for common carriers. And I am saying that I would be OK with them engaging in the very small amount of highly regulated moderation, that common carriers are allowed to do. Common carriers have large restrictions on the amount of moderation that they are allowed to do. I want those same restrictions to apply to other media platforms. |
Yeah, I don't think you know what common carrier actually means.[1]
The moderation that telecoms and ISPs perform relates to traffic that can negatively affect other users of those systems. Social media platforms can easily argue that their moderation already follows similar principles. It just happens that they deal with content, not raw bits, so they have to moderate content.
You also didn't address my other point, which is that ISPs aren't common carriers at all and this same FCC voted to make it so. So this seems pretty hypocritical behavior on their part.
1. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/47/153