Tom Brenner/Reuters
He also recently hired another antitrust activist to serve as a White House economic advisor.
These moves signal Biden s aggressive stance against tech giants like Google, Amazon, and Facebook.
President Joe Biden is poised to nominate Lina Khan, a top antitrust lawyer, to the Federal Trade Commission, Politico s Playbook reported Tuesday.
The decision is a sign of Biden s aggressive stance against tech giants like Facebook, Google, and Amazon, who have long drawn criticism from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Democrats accuse them of throttling competition in the marketplace and perpetuating the spread of disinformation. And Republicans accuse Facebook, Twitter, and other social media platforms of unfairly censoring conservative viewpoints, though there is no evidence for this claim.
Mon, Nov 2nd 2020 9:35am
Jess Miers
Everyone wants to do something about Section 230. It’s baffling how seldom we talk about what happens next. What if Section 230 is repealed tomorrow? Must Twitter cease fact-checking the President? Must Google display all search results in chronological order? Perhaps PragerU would finally have a tenable claim against YouTube; and Jason Fyk might one day return to showering the Facebook masses with his prized collection of pissing videos.
Suffice to say, that’s not how any of this works.
Contrary to what seems to be popular belief, Section 230 isn’t what’s stopping the government from pulling the plug on Twitter for taking down NY Post tweets or exposing bloviating, lying, elected officials. Indeed, without Section 230, plaintiffs with a big tech axe to grind still have a significant hurdle to overcome: The First Amendment.