COMMON SENSE AND KEY QUESTIONS



Similar documents
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT NO DOROTHY AVICOLLI, Appellant

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

A&E Briefings. Indemnification Clauses: Uninsurable Contractual Liability. Structuring risk management solutions

Network Neutrality and Broadband Service Providers First Amendment Right to Free Speech

Before the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Washington, D.C ) ) ) ) ) ) ) PETITION FOR RECONSIDERATION

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES

Michigan surplus lines premium tax -- liability of group self-insurance basis I. BACKGROUND

JUSTICE G. STEVEN AGEE v. Record No June 8, FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Michael P. McWeeney, Judge

First Come, First Served: Last One Standing By Dirk Koning. Movement on the flickering black and white security monitor catches my eye.

Case 2:14-cv MJP Document 40 Filed 01/06/15 Page 1 of 6

Summary of the Decision by the U.S. Supreme Court on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act

Case 1:14-cv JEB Document 17 Filed 09/23/14 Page 1 of 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNOPPOSED MOTION TO DISMISS

LEGAL UPDATE THIRD PARTY POP-UP ADVERTISEMENTS: U-HAUL INT L, INC. V. WHENU.COM. Andrew J. Sinclair

March 12, 1999 UIL # MEMORANDUM FOR DISTRICT COUNSEL (KENTUCKY-TENNESSEE) Attention: Martha J. Weber, Senior Attorney

****************************************************** The officially released date that appears near the beginning of each opinion is the date the

Wells Fargo Credit Corp. v. Arizona Property and Cas. Ins. Guar. Fund, 799 P.2d 908, 165 Ariz. 567 (Ariz. App., 1990)

Case 8:13-cv VMC-TBM Document 36 Filed 03/17/14 Page 1 of 11 PageID 134 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

TEXAS RICE LAND PARTNERS, LTD. V. DENBURY GREEN PIPELINE-TEXAS, LLC: TEXAS EMINENT DOMAIN LAW AND THE NOT-SO-COMMON COMMON CARRIER STATUS

1 of 1 DOCUMENT. ESTATE OF CLINTON MCDONALD PLAINTIFF v. INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA DEFENDANT CIVIL ACTION NO.

Focus. FEATURE COMMENT: DCAA Access To Information What You Need To Know And Strategies For Protecting Your Business

United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit. No ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellant Cross-Appellee,

SUPREME COURT OF FLORIDA

IN RE MARRIAGE CASES (California): 2008

In re Cuozzo Speed Technologies: Federal Circuit Decides Appeal Jurisdiction and Standard of Review Issues for AIA Reviews

POSSIBLE COMMERCE CLAUSE CLAIMS RELATED TO STATE TOLLING OF EXISTING INTERSTATES

PRACTICE ADVISORY 1. Understanding and Mitigating the Effect of Suspended Sentences By Al-Amyn Sumar 2. June 5, 2013

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT. No D.C. Docket No. 4:08-cv HL. versus

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE WASHINGTON, D.C

Case 2:11-cv TS-PMW Document 257 Filed 02/03/15 Page 1 of 5 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH CENTRAL DIVISION

2015 IL App (5th) U NO IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIFTH DISTRICT

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF UTAH, CENTRAL DIVISION

FROM MICHIGAN TO SEATTLE AND LOUISVILLE

New Illinois Ethics Rules on Lawyers Reporting Up Responsibilities

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Business Law 210. [Image of a Calvin & Hobbes cartoon strip]

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

Case 1:08-cv Document 45 Filed 10/19/2009 Page 1 of 7 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

Matter of Marcos Victor ORDAZ-Gonzalez, Respondent

No Filed: IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS SECOND DISTRICT

Home Schooling in California

In The Supreme Court of the United States

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA. Goldberg, J. December 15, 2014 MEMORANDUM OPINION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Nonstatutory Insiders Under Bankruptcy Code 101(31): An Arm s-length Test Is Not a Proper Test

2009 WI APP 51 COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN PUBLISHED OPINION

STATE OF TENNESSEE OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL. February 3, Opinion No QUESTIONS

OWNING REAL ESTATE IN A LAND TRUST FOR A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. by Douglas J. Sanderson

No IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Workers Compensation: A Response To the Recent Attacks on the Commission s Authority to Suspend A Claimant s Benefits

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Case 8:04-cv MJG Document 142 Filed 08/16/05 Page 1 of 20 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

PUBLISH UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS TENTH CIRCUIT. Plaintiff-Appellee, v. No CURTIS CORDERY,

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEVADA * * *

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE

DEFENDANT ATTORNEY GENERAL S REPLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF HIS MOTION TO DISMISS

Employee Relations. Howard S. Lavin and Elizabeth E. DiMichele

October 5, Treasury Solicitor s Department One Kemble Street, London, WC2B 4TS By BK@tsol.gsi.gov.uk. To Whom It May Concern:

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN PUBLISHED OPINION

The Distinction Between Insurance Agent and Insurance Broker in California. Robert W. Hogeboom, Esq. 1 (213) May 2006

Case 8:10-cv RWT Document 167 Filed 07/23/14 Page 1 of 7 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND ORDER

United States Court of Appeals

Case 1:07-cv Document 37 Filed 05/23/2007 Page 1 of 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

PUBLISH UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS TENTH CIRCUIT

Case 2:13-cv ILRL-KWR Document 31 Filed 02/26/14 Page 1 of 6 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA VERSUS NO.

LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT LAW UPDATE FOR MAY 2016 LEAGUE OF CALIFORNIA CITIES CONFERENCE. Timothy L. Davis. Burke, Williams & Sorensen, LLP

THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE BEFORE THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION

PDF security - a brief history of development

Transcription:

COMMON SENSE AND KEY QUESTIONS Stuart Minor Benjamin In the net neutrality proceeding at the FCC and in Verizon v. FCC, 1 Internet access service providers contended that the First Amendment applied to any regulation of their provision of Internet access service. As Susan Crawford notes in First Amendment Common Sense, 2 this argument, if accepted, would have enormous ramifications: any regulation of the services offered by Internet access providers would be subject to heightened scrutiny (and strict scrutiny if it was content based). I focused on this issue in a previous article, and came to the same basic conclusion that Crawford does. 3 Using broadly accepted legal sources, which for the First Amendment means primarily Supreme Court jurisprudence, 4 the Internet access providers argument is quite weak. The Court has treated the scope of the First Amendment expansively, but there is no real basis for contending that mere transmission of bits is speech. Although I largely agree with her bottom line, a list of our agreements would be boring. Instead, I want to focus on two considerations Crawford introduces in her analysis that I think are largely irrelevant: Internet access providers economic interests and their potential status as common carriers. In focusing on these two considerations, I believe Crawford distracts from the question whether Internet access providers are engaging in substantive communication. This is the key question under the Supreme Court s jurisprudence. As to the first consideration, in section II(B) of her article Crawford attributes significance to the fact that the Internet access providers interests are primarily economic. 5 I think this is irrelevant under the Supreme Court s jurisprudence and normatively. Many newspapers are owned by publicly traded companies answerable to shareholders, Douglas B. Maggs Professor of Law, Duke University School of Law. I worked at the FCC, and on net neutrality, during the 2010 net neutrality proceeding, and I have worked as a consultant with the FCC on net neutrality in 2014, but the views expressed are my own, and nothing in this article should be taken to reflect the views of the federal government or anyone within it. 1 740 F.3d 623 (D.C. Cir. 2014). 2 Susan Crawford, First Amendment Common Sense, 127 HARV. L. REV. 2343 (2014) 3 Stuart Minor Benjamin, Transmitting, Editing, and Communicating: Determining What The Freedom of Speech Encompasses, 60 DUKE L.J. 1673 (2011). 4 See Stuart Minor Benjamin, Algorithms and Speech, 161 U. PA. L. REV 1445, 1452 55 (2013) (noting that Supreme Court jurisprudence is the central broadly accepted legal source with respect to the Free Speech Clause). 5 Crawford, supra note 2, at 2375. 346

2014] COMMON SENSE AND KEY QUESTIONS 347 but First Amendment jurisprudence appropriately treats that as immaterial. 6 I think the relevant question under the prevailing jurisprudence turns on what Internet access providers are doing or want to do. Specifically, as Crawford notes, under the Supreme Court s jurisprudence First Amendment coverage seems to require a speaker who seeks to transmit some substantive message or messages to a listener who can recognize that message. 7 And that s all. 8 The Court has never found a substantive communication that was sendable, receivable, and actually sent to be outside First Amendment coverage unless it fell into one of the Court s articulated exceptions. And the Supreme Court has interpreted those exceptions narrowly. The Court s jurisprudence in recent years has made that particularly clear. In United States v. Stevens, 9 Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, 10 and United States v. Alvarez, 11 the Supreme Court addressed arguments in favor of broadening, or broadly construing, exceptions to First Amendment coverage. In each case the Court rejected such arguments, construing the exceptions quite narrowly and thus construing the First Amendment s coverage very broadly. 12 Importantly, the requirement of a message that is sendable and receivable and that one actually chooses to send means that if Internet access providers (or FedEx, or any other transmitter of speech) are willing to engage in substantive editing, then I think First Amendment scrutiny will apply to regulation of those activities. If an Internet access provider is willing to say, We give you an edited Internet the 6 See Benjamin, supra note 4, at 1473 (noting that for a newspaper or magazine owner who is a faithful agent, with shareholders who want the highest possible return on their investment, presumably all the owner s actions would be undertaken in order to maximize shareholder value ). For all I know, Jeff Bezos decided to find the best money-making opportunity available, and ended up flipping a coin as between buying a fracking operation and the Washington Post. 7 See Crawford, supra note 2, at 2382 ( Communication of a particular message requires a speaker who transmits some substantive message or messages to a listener who can recognize that message. ); accord Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622, 636 (1994) ( Cable programmers and cable operators engage in and transmit speech, and they are entitled to the protection of the speech and press provisions of the First Amendment. Through original programming or by exercising editorial discretion over which stations or programs to include in its repertoire, cable programmers and operators see[k] to communicate messages on a wide variety of topics and in a wide variety of formats. ) (alteration in original) (citation omitted) (quoting City of Los Angeles v. Preferred Commc ns, Inc., 476 U.S. 488, 494 (1986)); Benjamin, supra note 3, at 1696 1701 (discussing minima for application of First Amendment under the Supreme Court s jurisprudence and laying out the criteria described in the text). 8 See Benjamin, supra note 4, at 1461 71 (arguing that under the Supreme Court s jurisprudence, the criteria in text are not only necessary but also sufficient). 9 130 S. Ct. 1577 (2010). 10 131 S. Ct. 2729 (2011). 11 132 S. Ct. 2537 (2012) (plurality opinion). 12 See Benjamin, supra note 4, at 1456 58 (discussing the breadth of these cases).

348 HARVARD LAW REVIEW FORUM [Vol. 127:346 Internet we think you want, I think they are engaged in speech under the prevailing jurisprudence. But under the Supreme Court s jurisprudence it has to be editing that sends a substantive message. As I discussed in an earlier article, document delivery is an illustrative analogy. FedEx offers different delivery speeds for documents, with higher prices for faster speeds. Documents are covered by the First Amendment, but it is difficult to see how a statutory ban on this differential pricing would raise First Amendment issues. Transporting documents does not entail a communication, and thus the First Amendment would not seem to encompass FedEx s deliveries. It would be different if a company devoted its transportation of documents to messages with which it agreed. If, for example, a document transport company decided to deliver only documents to and from Democratic-affiliated groups, delivery would likely entail a communication. Every delivery would communicate to the recipient that a group that shared its political orientation was sending it a document. But for a transport company like FedEx that does not so limit itself, there is no similar message. FedEx s delivery of a document communicates no information about the content of that document. 13 The interesting question is what else constitutes a substantive message. Does blocking spam and malware constitute communication, and therefore speech for First Amendment purposes? It depends. A transmitter protecting its own network is engaged in nonsubstantive editing. But protecting users from receiving material that upsets them is substantive editing. It may be that the transmitter s filter is content neutral, but if its reason for blocking the content is substantive, then it is engaged in substantive editing. And if the transmitter communicates such substantive blocking to its users, that would seem to satisfy the requirements for communication and thus for the freedom of speech. This means that, to determine whether the First Amendment applies to an Internet access provider s decision to block spam and malware, a court must determine why the provider engaged in such blocking. Does the provider block to keep its network running efficiently, or also because it believes that its customers do not want the blocked content? If it blocks for substantive reasons (such as to protect its customers from content they do not want), does it communicate that to customers? Does it advertise itself as a company that blocks material that you would not like (or words to that effect)? 14 In her conclusion Crawford says she is concerned that if Internet access providers start to charge some edge providers, They will be, in 13 See Benjamin, supra note 3, at 1685 86. 14 See id. at 1705 11.

2014] COMMON SENSE AND KEY QUESTIONS 349 fact, exercising editorial discretion. They will have succeeded in recharacterizing their own activities for First Amendment purposes, all on their own. 15 As I indicated above, I don t agree that charging more for some users is editorial discretion. If so, then every company that charges different prices is engaged in speech by doing so, a result I do not find credible. But I also don t agree that there is any particular significance to whether or not they start engaging in true substantive editing. Either way, they can say they want to engage in substantive editing, and that s enough for First Amendment purposes. Turning to the other consideration that I think is irrelevant, in section II(A) Crawford argues that Internet access providers are in actuality common carriers. 16 And she suggests that the idea is that Internet access providers will escape[] all forms of oversight by virtue of mere administrative classification. 17 As the discussion above suggests, I think this focus on administrative or statutory categories is misplaced, both under the prevailing jurisprudence and normatively. In determining what is speech under the First Amendment, the Supreme Court has not relied on categories like common carriage, but instead has looked to see exactly what the alleged speakers do. Congress could tomorrow pass legislation compelling Upworthy and Reddit to give equal priority to all messages. The applicability of the First Amendment to Upworthy and Reddit would in no way depend on whether Congress also characterized them as common carriers in that legislation. And this is as it should be. If an entity is engaged in pure transmission of bits, I don t think it is engaged in speech, regardless of whether we call it a common carrier or a banana. This also highlights a fundamental agreement between Crawford and me how radical the Internet access providers argument is. 18 If transmitting bits constitutes speech, then the telephone companies in the twentieth century were speakers for First Amendment purposes, and their lawyers were fools not to have challenged common carriage as an infringement on its speech rights. In reality, the Supreme Court has always required substantive communication or self-expression as a requirement for the application of the First Amendment. 19 The discussion so far has focused on the Supreme Court s jurisprudence. Now let me take a step away from that jurisprudence. We certainly could eliminate any possibility of Internet access providers being speakers for First Amendment purposes if we were willing to bite the 15 Crawford, supra note 2, at 2391. 16 Id. at 2372. 17 Id. at 2375. 18 See id. at 2382 ( There is nothing inherently expressive about transmitting others data packets... over the Internet. ). 19 See Benjamin, supra note 4, at 1460 61.

350 HARVARD LAW REVIEW FORUM [Vol. 127:346 bullet and settle on an underlying theory of the First Amendment, and that theory did not extend to substantive editing by Internet providers. But any such theory would entail a significant reshaping of First Amendment coverage. We could decide that corporations can t be speakers. But newspapers and magazines are owned by corporations, so excluding them would be a radical change. As I noted above, excluding speech for economic reasons would knock out for-profit owners of newspapers and magazines. What about limiting the scope of the First Amendment to government actions with a censorial motive? Then we would have to investigate, and be confident we could discern, actual government motivation. And we would protect the blunderbuss legislature that has no censorial motive and doesn t care about speech. If we really want to prevent Internet access providers from being speakers, we are going to have to radically reshape the Supreme Court s First Amendment jurisprudence and understandings. Maybe that is what we need. But I do not think fears about Internet access providers claims support an overhaul of the Court s jurisprudence, in light of what the jurisprudence actually is. Is there anything short of revamping we should do? I think so. Insofar as we are concerned about the expansiveness of First Amendment coverage, we may want to limit it in two areas of genuine uncertainty: editorial decisions that are neither obvious nor communicated to the reader, and laws that single out speakers but do not regulate their speech. (The D.C. Circuit has treated regulation of the rates cable operators charge their customers as raising First Amendment issues. 20 ) Even with those limitations, however, an enormous and growing amount of activity will be subject to heightened scrutiny absent a fundamental reorientation of First Amendment jurisprudence. 20 See Benjamin, supra note 4, at 1481 91.