一项旨在遏制政府施压、保护合法网络言论的新法案
A new bill takes aim at government pressure to silence lawful online speech

原始链接: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/06/new-bill-takes-aim-government-pressure-silence-lawful-online-speech

参议员泰德·克鲁兹(Ted Cruz)和罗恩·怀登(Ron Wyden)提出了两党共同支持的《JAWBONE法案》,旨在遏制政府对私营平台的胁迫,即所谓的“软性胁迫”(jawboning)。该法案将赋予公民对那些向广播公司、人工智能提供商和科技公司施压以压制合法受保护言论的官员提起联邦诉讼的权利。此外,该法案还为政府与这些中介机构之间的沟通建立了透明度框架。 电子前沿基金会(EFF)对该立法表示支持,并强调了近期的滥权案例,例如强制要求苹果应用商店下架 ICEBlock 应用。通过提供法律补救途径,该法案旨在解决政府威胁越界导致侵犯宪法权利的问题。 然而,电子前沿基金会强调,这需要精细的平衡。区分非法胁迫与政府和私营实体之间合法、善意的沟通至关重要。此外,电子前沿基金会坚持认为,作为私营主体,平台自身也拥有第一修正案赋予的内容审核权。归根结底,保护企业进行独立编辑控制的权利,对于防止政府主导数字舆论空间至关重要。电子前沿基金会期待与国会合作,确保《JAWBONE法案》在保护言论自由的同时,不会对必要的对话产生寒蝉效应。

这场 Hacker News 讨论聚焦于一项由电子前哨基金会(EFF)支持的两党新法案,旨在遏制政府通过强制手段向社交媒体平台施压,从而对其合规言论进行审查。 该讨论帖围绕“政府施压”与“私人审核”的定义展开了广泛辩论。参与者讨论了政府干预的历史先例,例如在移民执法应用(ICEBlock)及新冠疫情虚假信息方面对平台施加的压力。许多评论者对该法案的两党性质表示怀疑,质疑这两个政党是否真正珍视言论自由,还是仅仅在将此议题作为政治筹码。 辩论的核心矛盾包括: * **私人责任与公共责任:** 大型科技平台应被视为“公共承运人”接受监管,还是应被允许根据自身政策及广告商压力进行内容审核。 * **第一修正案的范围:** 关于“有害”言论(如虚假信息或骚扰)是否能作为政府干预正当理由的辩论。 * **“滑坡谬误”:** 担忧政府对网络言论的介入,无论初衷如何,本质上都存在走向威权越权的风险。 这场对话最终凸显了人们对政府和企业权力根深蒂固的不信任。许多用户认为,在日益整合的数字环境下,真正的言论自由依然难以实现。
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原文

Last week, Senators Ted Cruz and Ron Wyden introduced the Justice Against Weaponized Bureaucratic Overreach to Networked Expression, or JAWBONE Act. The bipartisan legislation creates a federal cause of action against government officials who coerce or attempt to coerce broadcasters, interactive computer services, or AI providers into taking actions against lawful, First-Amendment-protected speech, and establishes a transparency system for government communications with those intermediaries about user expression.

We thank the Senators for their leadership on this important issue. Jawboning occurs when the government pressures private companies to censor speech protected by the First Amendment, and it’s not always obvious to the public or to the victims what has actually happened. Deleting posts or cancelling accounts because a government official or agency demanded it or even made threats in making those demands—just like spying on people’s communications on behalf of the government—raises serious free speech concerns. Among other things, this bill would provide a new legal right to bring claims against the government in federal court, in addition to what the First Amendment provides.

At EFF, we’re continuing to fight back on behalf of those censored by government coercion. One recent example: we represent the creator of ICEBlock, an app that allows the public to report immigration enforcement activity in their communities. In June 2025, high-ranking federal officials began threatening to investigate and prosecute the creator of ICEBlock, Joshua Aaron. In October 2025, the U.S. Attorney General demanded Apple remove ICEBlock from the App Store, and the company complied. The government’s coercion violated Aaron’s First Amendment rights.

We’ve also filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the same government agencies that threatened Aaron and other services that provided forums to report ICE activity. The lawsuit seeks the disclosure of the government’s communications with Apple, Google, and Meta that forced the services to remove lawful speech.

When federal officials pressure private companies into censoring protected speech, it can violate the First Amendment. But, not every communication from a government agency to a platform is unconstitutionally coercive. Treating legitimate communication and information-sharing between the government and private actors as though it were always unconstitutional would chill the valuable, good-faith engagement that supports a healthier and safer internet and nation for all Americans. This is a complex issue, and one that is important for Congress and the courts to get right. 

Finally, contrary to what many in Congress have been saying, social media platforms and other internet intermediaries have their own First Amendment rights to decide how they moderate users’ speech. They are not “state actors” and do not have an obligation under the First Amendment to allow all user speech on their platforms. EFF filed an amicus brief setting out our position in 2018, and we’ve said it in many cases since. The Supreme Court recognized again in the Netchoice cases that these services have a right to curate and edit their users’ speech, whether or not it aligns with the government’s position. And, it’s important to defend that First Amendment right so that governments cannot dictate how to edit a company’s site according to the government’s wishes and desires. To prevent jawboning by default, companies must be free to curate their platforms as they wish.

EFF applauds Senators Cruz and Wyden for taking this critical issue seriously, and we look forward to working with Congress on this bipartisan bill as it moves through the process. We hope it lands on the right balance to provide additional protections for everyday users around freedom of expression. 

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