The Atlantic

Facebook Restricts Speech by Popular Demand

The Constitution protects free speech, but internet companies are succumbing to public pressure to restrict it.
Source: Josh Edelson / AFP / Getty

This past week, with some fanfare, Facebook announced its own version of the Supreme Court: a 40-member board that will make final decisions about user posts that Facebook has taken down. The announcement came after extended deliberations that have been described as Facebook’s “constitutional convention.”

We don’t usually use sweeping terms such as and to describe the operation of private companies, but here they seem appropriate. Internet platforms such as YouTube and Facebook have been called the modern public square. That description understates the platforms’ importance for the many people who use them in place of newspapers, TV stations, the postal service, and even . People whose posts are removed from major platforms say they are being excluded from the most important communication channels of our age. We should care deeply about the rules these companies apply to our speech and behavior—whether PayPal should process , for example, or whether the security provider Cloudflare should protect or , or whether Facebook should have taken down the famous of a naked girl fleeing her village.

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