Law in the Internet Society
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Intermediary Liability: What is the best model?

-- By PulawitWanichsetakul - 10 Dec 2021

Introduction

As the internet is now a major communications channel, it became another mean for dissemination of hate speech generated by internet users. The problem of hate speech on the internet thus led to the issue of intermediary liability for third-party content.

ECtHR? on Intermediary Liability

In 2015 and 2016, the European Court of Human Rights (“ECtHR”) rendered two major decisions concerning intermediary liability for hate speech in Delfi AS v. Estonia and Magyar Tartalomszolgáltatók Egyesülete and Index.hu Zrt v. Hungary (“MTE”). In both cases, the question was whether domestic court’s decision holding internet intermediary liable for user-generated comments were in breach of its right to freedom of expression. The ECtHR? reached different results in these two cases as Delfi was found liable for the comments, but the MTE Court found that MTE and Index’s right were violated. Key differences were that most comments in Delfi were clearly hate speech. Delfi is a large news website, which earns revenue from the number of visitors. There was thus commenting environment integrated in its website. Most importantly, comments can only be modified or removed by Delfi. It therefore had substantial degree of control over the comments and was required to remove them without delay after publication to escape liability. Delfi had employed several measures including word-filtering and a notice-and-takedown system. However, Delfi’s word-filtering system failed to detect the speech in question, which had a direct meaning. As a result, these comments remained on website for six weeks.

Collateral Censorship: Who should be liable?

Per Professor Jack Balkin, in digital age, the shift from traditional publishers to platforms where any user can be a publisher made it difficult for States to regulate speeches online. Intermediary liability regime then became States’ method for controlling user-generated content on the internet. Intermediary liability therefore incentivizes intermediaries to overcensor to reduce the risk of liability and enjoy immunity. Imposition of intermediary liability thus leads to prior restraint and shifts the burden of err costs to speakers. The issue of intermediary liability therefore concerns confrontation between freedom of expression and the right to privacy and personality rights of users.

As regards the question of who should be liable for defamatory statements made online by anonymous/pseudonymous users, Professor Ronen Perry and Professor Tal Zarsky proposed a legal regime called ‘residual indirect liability’, which combines direct and indirect liability together. In this regime, the speaker is exclusively liable, but where he or she is not reasonably reachable, the content provider becomes liable. One example of this regime is the United Kingdom’s Defamation Act 2013. The question of liability thus relies on the capability to identify the speaker.

Testing proportionality as technical problem?

The question is when the Court found that the comment clearly constitutes hate speech and order the intermediary to filter content, to what extent the Court can order the platform to act?

CJEU on Filtering

In Glawischnig-Piesczek v Facebook Ireland, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) decided whether the Austrian Supreme Court orders to block ‘identical’ or ‘equivalent’ content were permissible under Article 15 of the EU’s E-Commerce Directive (ECD) and concluded that although courts cannot require the platform to independently assess whether content violates the law as it would contradicts the ECD’s blanket immunity for intermediaries from general monitoring obligations, courts can still issue more specific injunctions to block particular content identified by them. However, the CJEU did not address how measures like filters might work.

Filtering and risks for internet users

It is clear that the only way that a big entity like Facebook or Delfi proactively block specific content is by using filters. The question is how well courts understand the functioning and shortcomings of technology. The most used filters today are designed to find duplicates of known, specific content such as images, audio, or videos. For example, PhotoDNA? is used to find child sexual abuse content. Sophisticated filters may also find near-duplicates like cropped images. Duplicate-detection filters for written text are technically simpler but more prone to error because specific words/phrases can be unlawful in one situation but innocuous in another, but filters cannot assess the context in which information appears.

The CJEU noted in previous decisions about the risk that an automated filter might not distinguish adequately between lawful and unlawful content, which could lead to the blocking of lawful speech and preventing old material that was unlawful in certain context to be re-used in new contexts. Platforms with human review of filter decisions are incentivized to remove ‘gray area’ content to avoid losing the status of intermediary and immunity that comes with it, and instead err in taking down content flagged by filters. In the end, all human review could become a ‘rubber-stamping mechanism.’ Other means of correcting errors include counter-notice system, but its efficacy is still questionable, and it only provides remedy for speakers but not users unknowingly deprived of access to information.

How to design framework that includes mechanisms to protect both rights of intermediaries and internet users remain problematic. The EU is currently working on the proposed Digital Services Act (DSA), which is expected to update the ECD. While the intermediary liability regime is expected to be generally the same, the proposal introduces additional measures including notice-and-action procedures for illegal content and the possibility to challenge the platforms’ content moderation decision. As the DSA is still a proposal, it remains to be seen if the framework can work with every type of speech, to what extent the introduced functions will solve the current problems, and how much it considers current state of technology.


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r1 - 10 Dec 2021 - 05:15:10 - PulawitWanichsetakul
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