denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)
Denise ([staff profile] denise) wrote in [site community profile] dw_news2024-01-03 12:02 pm

In which we level up our fight for your digital civil rights

We're starting out our 2024 with some extremely exciting news that I've been bursting to share with you all: we are proud to announce that Dreamwidth has joined Netchoice, the industry organization that's been fighting many of the plague of terrible and unconstitutional social media laws being passed across the country.

As we mentioned in our year-end roundup, most of these laws proclaim to be "data privacy" or "child protection" laws, but if you actually look at them, they're backdoor censorship and deanonymization bills that threaten the privacy, safety, and anonymity of everyone who exists online. Dreamwidth is excellent proof that these laws are pretextual. As a service that accepts no advertising, does no data brokering, and has incredibly strong privacy and security features, if these laws were actually what they say they were, they shouldn't affect us at all: we would be able to comply with them without having to make a single change. Instead, the way these laws are written will require us to collect more information about our users than we want to collect, and require us to make it impossible for people to browse or register for the site without identifying themselves (often by forcing people to submit government-issued ID).

The terrible laws that aren't pretending to be data privacy or child protection laws are all tackling the issue of content moderation, either starting from the position that social media sites are engaging in too much content moderation and need to be stopped, or the position sites are engaging in too little content moderation and need to be forced to do more. (The fact that both arguments are repeatedly made about the same sites should cause anyone who gives it half a second's thought to realize the issue is a hell of a lot more complicated than the thirty-second soundbites, but that's another rant y'all have heard me rant before.) Both propositions have the same flaw: they're the government trying to forcibly impose editorial standards and dictate a site's content moderation decisions.

Every one of these content-moderation laws will also force us to place restrictions on constitutionally protected speech (that we don't want to place). There's a long history of jurisprudence in the US stating that the government placing restrictions on protected speech is unconstitutional, which is bad enough, but more than that: the first casualty whenever anyone starts making content-based laws restricting speech is always content posted by marginalized people, because the enforcement of content-based restriction is always disproportionately targeted at the marginalized. We've gone to the wall for your right to post legal adult content with providers before -- for anyone who doesn't remember, we once spent several months unable to accept payments at all because first PayPal and then Google Checkout decided that they wanted us to remove posts containing legal adult content they objected to, and we refused to do so -- but these laws also target a wide range of speech other than adult content, including political, scientific, literary, and artistic work. We object (strenuously) to the idea that the government should be able to dictate our editorial standards.

We also know that online anonymity is a popular target because of the perpetual myth that people posting anonymously online are more abusive than people whose identities are known. (It's a myth! Studies have repeatedly shown that people behave more abusively when their comments are identified with their wallet names than when they are purely anonymous, and the least abusive configuration is "stable, persistent pseudonymity" -- exactly like we offer here on DW.) Even though that myth isn't true, it refuses to die, and "just require everyone to identify themselves" is a frequent proposal for dealing with online abuse. Online anonymity is an important protection for any number of people, though: people living under oppressive governments, people engaged in many kinds of activism, whistleblowers, marginalized people who are looking to protect themselves, victims of domestic abuse, and many, many other groups of people all benefit from being able to use the internet without the risk of having to prove their identity first. The US Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that the right to anonymous speech is protected by the First Amendment, and we're not going to give up that right without putting up a hell of a fight.

Us becoming Netchoice members not only gives us more of a chance to be useful in these fights, it gives Netchoice more options for how they argue their cases: the annoying paradox with challenging internet content regulation laws is often that the small sites that will be most impacted by the really bad laws don't have the resources to fight them, but the large sites that do have the resources often don't have the legal standing to challenge them on certain grounds because they also have enough resources that complying with the law won't be an undue burden for them. With us as members, Netchoice's challenges to many of these laws will be stronger, and we're both very excited about the opportunities this will open up.

We'd like to thank Netchoice for the opportunity (and the folks on their litigation team for being such generally kickass people to work with). We'd also like to thank you all: a huge reason we can do this work is that we don't have outside investors, venture capitalists, or advertisers to keep happy, so we can make choices about which legal challenges to lend our (tiny) weight to based purely on whether we think the law is constitutional or not, without having to worry about what anyone but y'all might think of our participation. We are so very thankful that y'all like it when we get fighty about digital civil rights (again) and that you understand that legislators can say that a law has good intentions all they want, but good intentions don't magically make an unconstitutional law consitutional.

We'll continue to keep you posted about the legal challenges we help out on and the victories we're able to help score in defense of your legal right to be as anonymous as you want online and against the attempts of the government of any US state to control or limit your ability to post content that's legal for you to post. And I get to gleefully anticipate picking yet more fights with people who are Wrong About The Internet.
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[personal profile] kitarella_imagines 2024-01-03 05:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure if I'm supposed to reply to this but just to say thank you for making Dreamwidth such a nice place, I'm really enjoying it.
paserbyp: (Default)

[personal profile] paserbyp 2024-01-03 05:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for update about Netchoice and in case of any legal challenges I'll always support DW.

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[personal profile] scissorsevered 2024-01-03 05:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm so excited to see your work with Netchoice! Thank you for working so hard to keep Dreamwidth true to your vision, this is honestly one of my favorite websites I've ever been a part of.

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[personal profile] profiterole_reads 2024-01-03 05:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy New Year and thanks for all your work defending our rights!
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[personal profile] oldestcharm 2024-01-03 05:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for linking to the Digital Social Norm Enforcement article — it looks like a delightful read!

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[personal profile] brumeier 2024-01-03 05:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you so much for everything you do for us here at DW! I really appreciate your efforts!
azurelunatic: (Queer as a) $3 bill in pink/purple/blue rainbow.  (queer as a three dollar bill)

[personal profile] azurelunatic 2024-01-03 05:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm very happy you get to yell about the First Amendment, though as always sad that you have to do it.
skulltaffy: ❝⚓ ⚙✿♥♠◆♣♪♫🎶✖,⋎⋏✓⚡☼☂☁☠☢❖℧Ω❞ (♓ baa)

[personal profile] skulltaffy 2024-01-03 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy new year, Denise!!

Chiming in with another thank you for the update, but specifically as an international dwer (do... do we have a collective noun? unsure) - I'm not sure how the proposed laws affect us, but my gut says "probably a lot, and in some really nasty ways that we don't get any say in, because we're just weird internationals" (which is a lot harder to ignore then when Youtube gives me sass for being in the wrong country).

So just. thank you, from us too, for speaking up when we can't.

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[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2024-01-03 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for doing this. You rock.
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[personal profile] torino10154 2024-01-03 05:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I really appreciate all you do as well as your transparency/explanations.
niko_reubens: (stargazing)

[personal profile] niko_reubens 2024-01-03 05:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Awesome joining up with Netchoice. Seems like it will be a good thing. I look forward to fighting the people who are Wrong About The Internet. :D
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[personal profile] theradicalchild 2024-01-03 06:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I think the cybercriminals, many of which had conned me out of money several times and hacked my accounts years ago, should be the ones to be deanonymized, not those who respect the law.
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[personal profile] winter_doggo 2024-01-03 06:14 pm (UTC)(link)
It's always great to hear about people fighting for rights on the internet - it really helps when so many authorities who either don't understand or don't care are getting ready to make things worse for everybody. The internet has issues but so many of these proposals are NOT the way to fix it. Thank you for being part of the ray of hope :D
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[personal profile] loganberrybunny 2024-01-03 06:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! I'm not American so we don't have the First Amendment here, but I still very much appreciate your fight in the US. Here too, "real name" approaches get pushed every time someone does something bad on the internet. In some ways it wouldn't be disastrous if I had to use my real name here, but a) I really don't want to or see why I should have to, b) identity theft is a big and growing thing, c) I know people who would be at risk, d) oh, I could easily go all the way to z here.

Thank you too for keeping us all posted!
cmcmck: my goodself (Chiara2)

[personal profile] cmcmck 2024-01-03 06:33 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm glad of this as I use a pseudonym being a member of an oppressed (certainly by the present UK government) minority and I don't think my friends on here would say I was abusive. :o)

It's not as if pen names are exactly new. I've been writing poetry under a pen name since I was fifteen!
teres: A picture of a fire salamander against a white background. (Salamander)

[personal profile] teres 2024-01-03 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)

Well done! And thank you for all you do!

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[personal profile] sheron 2024-01-03 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you ♥
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[personal profile] bastun 2024-01-03 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for the update. Keep up the great work!
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[personal profile] otter 2024-01-03 07:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for the work you do.
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[personal profile] redsixwing 2024-01-03 07:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you! DW has been such an excellent example to point to, and I look forward to your future endeavors in keeping the internet as good a place as it can be.
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[personal profile] wingedcatgirl 2024-01-03 07:27 pm (UTC)(link)

people behave more abusively when their comments are identified with their wallet names than when they are purely anonymous

This isn't the first time I've heard this, but it always kinda startles me. Like it's not that surprising that wallet names aren't any better than your typical internet handle (if they were, there wouldn't be so much offline bullying and crime, would there?), but that they're worse than true anonymity... wild.

conuly: (Default)

[personal profile] conuly 2024-01-03 11:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, it's very strange and a little hard to fathom. Not that I disbelieve the evidence, just....

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[personal profile] juan_gandhi 2024-01-03 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)

Thank you so much for what you do, for your fight, and for helping us to have a cosy, friendly environment, with no censorship and no porn/spam, that make our presence on facebook so uncomfortable.

ride_4ever: (Dreamwidth Shiny)

[personal profile] ride_4ever 2024-01-03 07:40 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you kindly for this and for all the wonderful things about DW that have made and continue to make DW my choice of the place online to have my "fandom home".
juniperphoenix: Fire in the shape of a bird (Default)

[personal profile] juniperphoenix 2024-01-03 07:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for taking on this important work, and for being generally awesome. :)
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[personal profile] musyc 2024-01-03 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
*\o/*

Kudos from one of the many who would hold your flower whilst you lay down a righteous smacking.
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