Toeing the Line Between Censorship and Content Moderation
In August, Matthew Prince, CEO and co-founder of Cloudflare, sent an , explaining his decision to terminate the Daily Stormer鈥檚 use of the content-delivery network:
鈥淓arlier today Cloudflare terminated the account of the Daily Stormer. My rationale for making this decision was simple: the people behind the Daily Stormer are assholes and I鈥檇 had enough.鈥
Few people disputed Prince鈥檚 claim that the people behind the Daily Stormer are, in fact, assholes. The site, which has since gone to the dark web, was overstuffed with hateful, racist content.
But what was disputed was Prince鈥檚 decision to remove the Daily Stormer from Cloudflare because of that. Although some praised the decision, others鈥攊ncluding Prince himself鈥攆eared the precedent it might set for other issues of content moderation. Still, Prince hoped that the controversial decision would be a launching pad for an important conversation both within the United States and around the world.
鈥淭here were several German newspapers that wrote editorials that said 鈥楴eo Nazis are bad, but Cloudflare shouldn鈥檛 be making that decision,鈥欌 Prince said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 what made me think that even though I鈥檓 deeply concerned, I am incredibly happy we provoked this conversation. Deep infrastructure companies shouldn鈥檛 be making that determination, but first we have to have a conversation about why.鈥
Cloudflare differs from platforms like Facebook and Twitter in that it isn鈥檛 a content publisher, but a content delivery network. 2.8 billion people Cloudflare鈥檚 network every month, even though most have never heard of the company. And Prince admits that that鈥檚 how he sees it鈥攖hat Cloudflare should be so content neutral that people don鈥檛 even know they鈥檙e passing through its network. But, Prince added, the Daily Stormer incident, he felt, compelled him and his team to abandon that neutrality.
鈥淲e made the determination that we would terminate this one customer, but then we鈥檙e going to talk about exactly why,鈥 Prince said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to hide behind our terms of service. We鈥檙e going to say, 鈥榃e did this. At the end of the day, it was dangerous. So let鈥檚 talk about it.鈥 Because we鈥檝e been talking about this within Cloudflare for the last six years, but our mistake was not having that conversation more universally.鈥
But Kevin Bankston, director of the Open Technology Institute at 国产视频, pointed out that, as important as that conversation might be, the removal of the Daily Stormer still had the potential to set a dangerous precedent for content moderation online.
鈥淎s a provider of critical infrastructure for the internet, you arbitrarily demonstrated your technical capability and willingness to take down something you found objectionable, basically strengthening the hand of anyone who has been arguing that those with the power to do so, should do so and, perhaps should be made to do so,鈥 Bankston said.
Prince acknowledged that his decision has led to an increase in requests for content to be removed from Cloudflare. Since August, Cloudflare has received more than 7,000 requests from across the political spectrum for removal of offensive content鈥攊ncluding a cooking blog, although no one at Cloudflare could quite figure out that particular request.
鈥淚鈥檓 skeptical of the slippery slope argument, but it is real. From our perspective, what we were trying to do, and what I worry about, is how we understand when it is the right time and the wrong time to do this, and how do we acknowledge all tech companies aren鈥檛 the same and create a framework that works not only here, but in the rest of the world.鈥
That scale of globalization only further complicates the discussion around content moderation and censorship. Users in the United States have a First Amendment-based right to freedom of speech, but users in China don鈥檛 have that same right. But what Prince stressed was the need for this conversation to go beyond tech CEOs and boardrooms to ordinary internet users around the world.
鈥淲e can preach to the choir, but what we really need is to get people to think deeply about what the internet technology stack is without their eyes glazing over,鈥 Prince said. 鈥淵ou go home for Thanksgiving and your weird Uncle Ted is complaining about Facebook and the Russians. Instead we鈥檝e got to get Uncle Ted to say, 鈥楬ey, I don鈥檛 think that Matthew Prince guy should be making determinations about what I do or don鈥檛 see online.鈥 If we can convince the weird uncles around the world to start calling for transparency about this issue, we can really have a conversation about content moderation.鈥