欧盟对X的罚款并非关于言论或“审查”。
The EU's Fine Against X Is Not About Speech or 'Censorship'

原始链接: https://www.techpolicy.press/the-eus-fine-against-x-is-not-about-speech-or-censorship/

2022年5月,埃隆·马斯克最初表示支持欧盟的《数字服务法案》(DSA)。然而,X(前身为Twitter)现在正面临来自欧盟的1.2亿欧元罚款,并非因内容审核问题,而是违反了DSA的基本运营要求。 这些指控源于2023年的一项调查,重点关注三个方面:欺骗性的验证机制(蓝色勾号)、广告缺乏透明度以及研究人员的数据访问受限。X改变了其验证流程,导致冒充和诈骗行为,并且未能提供一份全面的公共广告档案——详细说明谁为广告付费及其内容——如DSA所要求。此外,X还阻碍了研究人员访问公开数据。 这些要求反映了美国现有或拟议的法律,获得了两党支持,侧重于消费者保护和透明度,而非审查。虽然对内容和“社区笔记”的进一步调查仍在进行中,但当前的罚款表明欧盟致力于执行DSA的基础规则,无论面临跨大西洋的政治压力。

最近欧盟对X(前身为Twitter)的罚款被一些人误解为审查,这在Hacker News上引发了讨论。罚款源于三个主要问题:关于已验证标志的透明度不足(一个模仿埃隆·马斯克的账号被错误验证突显了这一点),平台数据访问受限,以及广告透明度不足,未能披露特定广告的资金来源。 评论员强调,这些是良好治理和透明度问题,而非侵犯言论自由。一些用户指出,美国国务院宣布对参与此事的欧盟官员实施报复性签证限制。另一些人则对欧盟内部日益收紧的限制表示担忧,这些限制针对持有异议观点的人,并影响他们获得基本服务,质疑这是否构成一种极权主义形式。 核心争论在于区分合法的监管问题和审查指控。
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原文

In May of 2022, shortly after he announced his bid to buy Twitter (now X), billionaire Elon Musk, left, met with former European Commissioner Thierry Breton, right, in Austin, Texas. At the time, Musk said Europe's Digital Services Act (DSA) was "exactly aligned" with his thinking. Source

Don't let anyone — not even the United States Secretary of State — tell you that the European Commission's €120 million enforcement against Elon Musk’s X under the Digital Service Act (DSA) is about censorship or about what speech users can post on the platform. That would, indeed, be interesting. But this fine is just the EU enforcing some normal, boring requirements of its law. Many of these requirements resemble existing US laws or proposals that have garnered bipartisan support.

There are three charges against X, which all stem from a multi-year investigation that was launched in 2023. One is about verification — X’s blue checkmarks on user accounts — and two are about transparency. These charges have nothing to do with what content is on X, or what user speech the platform should or should not allow. There is plenty of EU political disapproval about those things, for sure. But the EU didn’t choose to pick a fight about them. Instead, it went after X for violating much more basic, straightforward provisions of the DSA. Those violations were flagrant enough that it would be weird if the EU hadn't issued a fine.

The ‘blue checks’ charge is about consumer deception. X changed the rules about how it does verification in a way that allowed impersonation and scams to flourish. It’s kind of like if a grocery store said it had vetted all the produce in its special ‘blue check’ section for worms — but then once consumers started relying on that, it actually stopped checking. As the Commission put it, the DSA “clearly prohibits online platforms from falsely claiming that users have been verified, when no such verification took place.” In the US, consumers who were harmed by that kind of bait and switch might also seek protection under laws that prohibit unfair and deceptive commercial practices.

The ‘ads transparency’ charge stems from the DSA’s requirement that platforms must maintain a public archive showing what ads the platform ran, who paid for them, and other information. X fell drastically short of meeting this requirement, according to EU investigators. They found that X’s archive didn't show who paid for ads, what the ads’ content was, or even what general topic areas they fell into.

In the US, this ad archive requirement and other DSA transparency mandates would probably be challenged as speech compulsions under the First Amendment. But there’s a pretty good chance those challenges would fail, given that two circuits have upheld far more searching transparency requirements for platforms. Notably, that includes mandates passed by Republican legislatures in Texas and Florida. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr’s platform regulation proposals in Project 2025 also included mandates for platforms to explain and justify their editorial decisions. As I’ve explained in some very wonky legal analysis, requirements of that sort raise far more serious concerns about state power over online speech than the basic disclosure rules that X violated in the EU.

The third thing the EU penalized X for is not giving researchers better access to public data. This enforcement is not about the DSA’s more famous and controversial requirement for platforms to hand over internal data. It’s just about information that was already publicly available on X’s site and app. The Commission says that X violated the DSA’s transparency requirements by prohibiting researchers from scraping information. It seems to also be saying that X’s process for researchers to use APIs — also for already-pubilc data — were too cumbersome. (A German lawsuit against X made the same point, and documented the stumbling blocks the company has created even for researchers seeking public information.)

A bill to require similar scraping rights and API access — the Platform Accountability and Transparency Act (PATA) — had bipartisan support in Congress when it was reintroduced in 2023. It would have created a safe harbor for researchers to scrape platforms and an obligation for platforms to create mechanisms for them to access public data.

That's it! That's everything X is in trouble for under the DSA, at least for now. Additional investigations, including one focused on Community Notes and another about illegal content, remain open. Those could eventually raise legitimate questions about the limitations that Europe’s own free expression protections under the EU Charter place on DSA enforcement. And of course, the investigation into illegal content will include some expression — like hate speech — that is lawful in the US but not in the EU. European governments want to enforce their own laws inside their own borders, just like any other country.

The fine announced today is important, mostly because it answers longstanding questions about how aggressively the Commission would enforce the DSA in the current transatlantic political climate. But it is also not remotely surprising, given how clearly X was violating some pretty basic legal requirements. And, fundamentally, it is not about speech. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.

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