The Daily Signal - In Face of Big Tech Censorship, Free Speech Alternatives Emerge Online
Episode Date: January 14, 2022Big Tech actors like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube feel increasingly comfortable banning conservative voices from their platforms. But as Big Tech is willing to censor conservatives for their speech,... other platforms devoted to free expression are starting to fill the gap. The director of The Heritage Foundation's Center for Technology Policy, Lora Ries, contends that as long as these big platforms continue to censor dissent, alternative platforms will crop up to try to serve as alternatives. (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of The Heritage Foundation.) "The new CEO [of Twitter] has been quoted as less concerned with free speech and more about driving their users toward information that Twitter wants to provide," Ries said as an example of Big Tech censorship. "That doesn't bode well for free speech or true public discourse or having disagreements about difficult topics like COVID and COVID response." "So as long as that trend continues, then these alternatives, I think, will grow and compete with each other," she added. Ries joins "The Daily Signal Podcast" to discuss how Big Tech censors conservatives and how platforms such as Gettr and Rumble are putting free speech at the forefront. We also cover these stories: The Supreme Court blocks the Biden administration from enforcing its COVID-19 vaccine mandate for businesses with 100 or more employees. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., confirms she will not back efforts to alter the filibuster, seemingly ending attempts by Senate Democrats to change the procedure. The House of Representatives passes a controversial elections-related bill that would greatly expand the federal government’s control of state and local election laws. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Daily Signal podcast for Friday, January 14th.
I'm Virginia Allen.
And I'm Doug Blair.
Big Tech actors like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube feel increasingly comfortable banning conservative voices from their platforms.
But as Big Tech is willing to censor conservatives for their speech, other platforms devoted to free expression are starting to make their moves.
Director of Heritage Center for Technology Policy, Laura Reese joins the show to talk about how big tech censors conservatives and how platforms like Getter and Roe.
Rumble are putting free speech at the forefront.
But before we get to Doug's conversation with Laura Reese, let's hit our top news stories
of the day.
The Supreme Court has blocked the Biden administration from enforcing its COVID-19 vaccine
mandate for businesses.
The mandate would have required businesses with 100 or more employees to have everyone
vaccinated or undergo weekly testing.
On Thursday, the court ruled the Biden administration overstepped its bounds by using
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, to mandate vaccines.
And an unsigned opinion, the six conservative justices wrote,
OSHA has never before imposed such a mandate, nor has Congress.
Indeed, although Congress has enacted significant legislation addressing the COVID-19 pandemic,
it has declined to enact any measures similar to what OSHA has promulgated here.
The three liberal justices, Stephen Breyer, Elena Kagan, and Sonia Sotomayor, dissented,
writing an assigned opinion, acting outside of its competence and without legal basis,
the court displaces the judgments of the government officials given the responsibility
to respond to workplace health emergencies.
While the court blocked the OSHA mandate from taking effect,
the court did rule that the administration can mandate COVID-19 vaccines
for medical facilities that take Medicare or Medicaid.
President Joe Biden is asking social media companies to take action
to stop the spread of misinformation about COVID-19.
During a speech to the nation Thursday, addressing efforts to address the rise in COVID cases,
Biden said social media platforms have an important role to play right now, per Yahoo Finance.
I make a special appeal to social media companies and media outlets.
Please deal with the misinformation and disinformation that's on your shows.
It has to stop.
Biden did not mention Edie's social.
social media platforms by name. The president's remarks come shortly after a group of 270 doctors
sent a letter to Spotify regarding the podcaster Joe Rogan's interview with phorologist Dr. Robert
Malone at the end of December. The podcast episode discussed the pandemic and the efficacy of the
vaccine. In the letter, the doctors asked Spotify to take action against the mass misinformation
events which continue to occur on its platform. Variety reports that the Joe Rogan experience was the
number one podcast on Spotify in 2021. Biden also made an appeal to unvaccinated Americans during his
Thursday speech, encouraging them to get the vaccine. And the president announced he is ordering
another 500 million at home COVID tests atop the 500 million he already announced.
Democrat Senator from Arizona, Kristen Sinema, confirmed on Thursday that she will not back efforts to alter the filibuster, seemingly ending attempts by Senate Democrats to change the procedure.
In a floor speech on Thursday, Cinema argued that removing the filibuster would hurt the nation, that the best way forward to pass legislation is through bipartisan cooperation.
Here's cinema via Forbes.
Eliminating the 60-vote threshold will simply guarantee that we lose a critical tool.
that we need to safeguard our democracy from threats in the years to come.
It is clear that the two-party strategies are not working, not for either side,
and especially not for the country.
Now, it's comfortable for members of each party,
particularly those who spent their career in party politics,
to think that their respective party alone can move the country forward.
Party control becomes a goal in and of itself.
Instead of prioritizing a healthy, appropriate balance in which Americans' diverse views and shared values are represented.
But when one party need only negotiate with itself, policy will inextricably be pushed from the middle towards the extremes.
Cinema joins fellow Senate Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia in pushing back against the,
attempts to remove or alter the filibuster. In response to Cinema's Thursday speech,
Manchin told reporters, very good, excellent speech. The House of Representatives passed a
controversial voting bill on Thursday. The bill would expand the federal government's role in state
and local election laws. The vote Thursday was directly along party lines, with Democrats
supporting it and Republicans voting against it. Heritage Foundation, senior legal fellow
Hans von Spakovsky says bills like the one the House passed Thursday would only make elections
less secure. He detailed the purpose of the bill on Morning Wire Thursday. They do everything from
gut state voter ID laws to severely restrict the ability of states to clean up and maintain the
accuracy of their voter rolls. In essence, it's like they want to guarantee dishonest elections
for the foreseeable future.
would allow for same-day voter registration and permit anyone to vote by absentee ballot for any
reason. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer says he will bring the bill up for a vote in the Senate
before the Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday. But the bill is unlikely to pass as long as the
filibuster is still in place. The voting bill would require 10 Republican votes to meet the 60
votes required in the Senate. Now stay tuned for my conversation with Laura
Reese as we discuss big tech censorship and the rise of free speech-focused platforms like
Getter and Rumble.
I'm Zach Smith.
And I'm John Carl O'Conaparo.
And if you want to understand what's happening at the Supreme Court, be sure to check
out SCOTUS 101, a Heritage Foundation podcast.
We take a look at the cases, the personalities, and the gossip at the highest court in the land.
Be sure to subscribe on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever else you find your podcasts.
It's SCOTUS 101.
Our guest today is Laura Reese, director of the Center for Technology Policy and Senior Research Fellow for Homeland Security at the Heritage Foundation.
Laura, thank you so much for joining the show.
Thanks for having me on.
With the rise of censorship from platforms like Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, we've seen free speech-focused alternatives such as getter and rumble pop up to try and take their place as free speech-friendly platforms.
How successful have those efforts been so far?
Well, it's still relatively early, and they are kind of at their infancy, these new companies.
But they seem to get quick spurts of people joining them.
For example, just last week, Getter had one million people join.
They're now up to 4.2 million.
Now, you compare that to Twitter, which has 330 million.
It's an uphill battle, but nonetheless.
when you have very public events of censorship, such as the Joe Rogan interview with Dr. Malone
regarding COVID taken down from both YouTube and Twitter, it drives people to these other platforms.
So I suspect they're just going to grow, but it's going to take some more time.
I'm curious, do you happen to know if Twitter was in the same boat where they sort of grew very
quickly at first and then sort of kind of petered off?
Or was that not how they went?
So I think Twitter was more organic and a little more a gradual increase over the years.
You know, it was a brand new type of communicating 140 characters.
It was foreign to people.
And so it was much more steady, slow growth as people got comfortable with it.
So I view that differently than these new platforms that are being created almost out of necessity just for conservative.
and others to be able to communicate with confidence that their content's not going to be taken down
or their reputation maligned, et cetera.
Do Getter and Rumble really take their kind of claim to fame as the censorship thing,
where their free speech platforms or are there other issues at play that make these
alternatives so popular?
They do take it to heart, and I think they're having a much smarter approach to content.
Nobody wants extreme violence posted on their platforms or sexual explicit material,
you know, sex trafficking, things like that.
And that is if you talk about the legislation and the liability protection that these tech platforms have,
that was given to them by Congress, the focus is obscene, lewd, filthy, excessively violent, harassing.
Those are the standards.
Now, there is also in that language given to them by Congress, otherwise objectionable.
And it's in that very vague standard or term that companies like Twitter and YouTube are putting in whatever content they suddenly find objectionable.
And so it's very vague and it's difficult for users to know what rules they should be following.
So these new companies have gone much more back to the original intent.
And they said, you know, it's not that hard.
If you're going to talk about Ivermectin, fine.
We're not going to take your content down.
Beheadings, yes, we're taking that down.
And so I think they have the right approach.
And I think the older platforms like Twitter and YouTube and Facebook did themselves
and certainly their users a disservice when they decided.
to basically referee content because how do you manage that with just the sheer volume of content that is up?
They're going to miss stuff. They're going to get it wrong. And they certainly have.
Speaking of people who have been censored, you mentioned Robert Malone at the beginning.
Former President Trump and recently after that, Representative Marjorie Taylor Green were banned from these mainstream social media platforms.
Have they found success on these alternative?
platforms? Well, President Trump has held back. Getter would like for President Trump to join there. He has not. Now,
meanwhile, he is about to put out his, he started his own company, the Trump Media and Technology
Group. The Truth Social is the social media platform that that that company is going to
launch in February. It seems to be like a Twitter alternative.
So I think President Trump's kind of holding back and want to focus on the new company that he's starting.
Other people who have been suspended like Representative Green, yes, they're going elsewhere.
Getter seems to be the hot one right now.
Pre January 6th, it was Parlor that was experiencing a lot of conservatives moving over off of Twitter and Facebook,
whether Sean Hannity or Mark Levin and many others.
And then, of course, after January 6th, you know, they were kicked off the app stores
and then AWS Amazon Web Services pulled the plug on them.
I am curious to follow up on that, what is the guarantee that these new platforms will not be
axed by Amazon Web Services or something?
What's the guarantee that that's not going to happen again?
Well, if you're just talking an application, something in an application story, you don't have
that guarantee because you're dealing with either, you know, Apple or the Play Store for Google.
And if they yank you, you know, that's, you, there are workarounds where you could go on your
laptop and still access some applications. But it's a lower level in the technology stack where
Amazon Web Services, it's the hosting service. And if that gets pulled, it's lights out. And that's
exactly what parlor experienced. So now you're having more companies build their own infrastructure.
There's a company called Wright Forge, for example, which is it both hosts, it provides
data centers, but also applications. And so there's more confidence there for users that
they're not going to have the rug pulled out from them and then not be able to operate at all.
There are other parts of electronic services, though, that people have to think about, too.
Email, you know, Mailchimp has been questionable, but also financial services and payment services.
Companies like Stripe also kicked off Trump activities and fundraising events.
Wells Fargo, Chase.
So that is another aspect of our digital lives that conservatives need to.
to keep an eye on and perhaps go elsewhere or build their own.
You know, I'm fortunate.
It becomes very balkanized, but people need to live and, you know, raise money and
be able to bank, et cetera.
So this is the world we're living on right now.
We discussed the move from sort of a lower profile site like Getter to a large explosion
of people.
You mentioned one million people joined at a time.
And one of the things that kind of precipitated that was when podcaster Joe Rogan moved from Twitter to Getter.
Obviously, he has both, but he is now on Getter as well.
Is that how these sites will begin to pick up traction is through large people, kind of like high profile people moving from one site to the other site?
That seems to be the trend right now.
Another one example is Rumble.
So Senator Rand Paul left YouTube and moved over to Rumble.
to post video content.
And you've got other members going over there,
whether it's former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard,
an actor like Russell Brand.
And so now these companies seem eager to announce new big names
coming to their platforms to then increase users signing up.
Now, we've actually kind of discussed
how these things kind of ebb and flow.
I almost sometimes fear that these places are just kind of flashes in the pan, right?
Remember parlor, gab.
These are all sites that kind of came and went.
I guess do we see these efforts to decouple from the bigger platforms as being something
sustainable, or do we see this as kind of a rotating cycle?
I think it's too early to tell.
But it does not seem like Twitter is going to let up in terms of removing content and removing
accounts entirely. You know, the new CEO has been quoted as, you know, less concerned with free
speech and more about driving their users towards the information that Twitter wants to provide.
That doesn't bode well for free speech or, you know, true public discourse or having disagreements
about difficult topics like COVID and COVID response. So as long as that trend continues,
then these alternatives, I think, will grow and compete with each other and also spread into some of
these other areas I talked about perhaps like email services and payment services and the like.
You mentioned that Twitter and these other social media titans don't really seem like they're going
to respond by clamping down on censorship. They're going to keep doing it. Have they officially made
any statements about these platforms? Do they seem concerned? They don't seem to be concerned.
I think given the advertising money that these older, larger platforms raise as well as their
user base and sheer volume and their global reach, they don't seem too concerned with these
newer platforms. One issue I would note, though, is just convenience. I mean, I myself didn't
used to use Twitter until a couple years ago. And just I find one social platform, it's time
consuming to read up, keep up on, on, you know, what's being posted and to post yourself.
I don't have the time to, you know, go to multiple sites and read up and post, and I'm sure I'm not
alone on that. And so the idea of cross-posting is interesting to me. So can you cross-post on, say,
getter and Twitter.
What does that mean in terms of agreements between those companies or inconsistent policies
and guidelines?
It's going to be interesting to watch.
Now, that is an interesting point that there would have to be some sort of agreement between
Twitter and Getter to do a cross-posting thing.
A lot of people will start to accuse these sites like Rumble and Getter, even parlor and
gab, of being conservative echo chambers and that not being a way to sort of reach out to
larger Americans as a whole.
How do we make sure that these are actual competitive alternatives or how do the sites themselves
make sure that they're actual competitive alternatives and not just perceived as conservative
echo chambers?
Well, I think as long as they stay in that very easy, clean content moderation set of
guidelines of, you know, not excessively violent or explicit sexual postings, they are going
going to get, these newer platforms are going to get a much more of a draw and not just by conservatives.
I mean, there were plenty of apolitical people, left-leaning people throughout this COVID pandemic
who really questioned why is honest discussion around medicines and treatments and alternative
options to COVID as a response? Why is that misinformation for a brand new disease that, you know,
people are just learning as we go.
And so I think it's opened a lot of eyes, not just conservatives, about what's happening
and in terms of free speech, public speech.
And I think these newer platforms will benefit from it.
I want to dive into that free speech idea because obviously as lovers of liberty,
we want free speech to be the priority.
I've talked with colleagues, friends who are on some of these platforms who view the angle,
of the only thing we will take down is something that is explicitly illegal, something like
a beheading video that you mentioned on, maybe Rumble.
How do these sites balance the free speech needs and the concerns of safety?
Because I've heard that some of these comments that some of these people receive are quite
vulgar and vile, but where's the balance?
So free speech historically in the U.S. has been, it's been difficult.
There have been many cases in the courts that have gone.
to the Supreme Court.
You know, the often cited rule is you can't yell fire in a movie theater.
So if you are actively inciting violence, then that's not okay.
But otherwise, there has to be room for offensive language.
And, you know, these days everybody's offended.
So the benefit of the doubt needs to go towards more speech, not less.
Does that prove to be maybe a concern?
One of the reasons I know a lot of people sometimes will criticize Twitter on the left,
well, they'll say this was vulgar, this was vile, it was threatening to me,
why didn't you take it down?
And then Twitter tends to respond in that way.
Do we see that maybe that would be a problem for some of these smaller sites like Getter and Rumble
if they don't do that?
I mean, it could be.
I think the harder they try to stick to that easier, cleaner set of guidelines,
the more successful that they will be.
Literally, I think it takes an army at companies like Twitter to play referee on some of this stuff.
And it's not good for business.
It's not good for Americans, the users, or free speech or our body politic.
What are some of the lessons you think that the larger companies can be taking from some of these companies like Getter and Rumble?
Well, that they should return to the original intent of what was behind Section 230 liability protection.
They should be allowing more free speech, not less.
They should not be getting in this business of disinformation or misinformation because, you know, who defines that?
It's very vague.
It seems to change weekly.
and it seems to be bleeding into political speech, you know, what members of Congress, some would like to label as extremism.
It's just a very slippery, very dangerous slope.
And unfortunately, they seem to be going down that path.
It would be good for them to stop and reassess and move in the other direction.
It's not going to be good for business for them.
They're giving up about half of the American population if they view speech from the right or even the center right as extremist or labeling topics as misinformation.
How do these conversations about big tech alternatives fit into conservative views on things like?
like Section 230.
More competition is better.
Free market, fair market.
As conservatives, we are all for that.
Now, a lot of these big tech companies would argue,
oh, we have lots of competition.
It's funny, we receive a weekly email from Google,
and it's literally called weekly competition facts,
where they try to show other companies
and how they provide competition to Google.
I would note on here I rarely or hardly ever see anything regarding, say, search engine.
So if you have to say we have competition every week, you know, it begs the question, do you really?
But for these big tech companies, it's more about their behavior.
You know, what are they doing, whether it is preferencing in terms of search engine results or moderating content
or fact-checking.
And so that's where there is a real opportunity for much more,
not just competitive platforms to emerge and to grow,
but companies that act like, you know, free market companies
and are not getting in the business of deciding what speech is allowed and what isn't.
So we begin to wrap up, I'd like to ask kind of two paired questions.
first off, should conservatives feel comfortable moving to these platforms?
Generally, yes.
Now, one issue I think both these companies need to pay attention to, but so do users and
prospective users.
And that is who's financing these companies?
Where are the servers?
And this is something Parlor ran into after January 6th, when it tried to reststand up the
company, in terms of who's doing cybersecurity, where?
are the servers hosted? Are they domestic? Are there Russian ties? Are there Chinese ties? Because then you're
getting into security issues, data privacy concerns. So the companies and the founders and the users,
as best users can, should do some due diligence. And then the second part of the question is,
should conservatives then leave these other platforms like YouTube and Twitter? Well, I mean, in some
cases they don't have a choice. They're kicked off permanently. There is certainly an argument
to be made that if you leave, if conservatives all leave Twitter, then we're not taking good
arguments and logic and thoughtful policy recommendations and conversations to the left
and trying to convince people on the left that, you know, they are indeed good policy decisions.
And so if you just abandon Twitter to the left, you know, that's not a good thing either.
So that's where, you know, maybe this cross-posting is a good idea, where you can have a little bit more security on some of these personal security in terms of confidence that you're not going to be kicked off on some of these new smaller alternatives.
but you're also still making good arguments and
giving persuasive ideas on the platforms like Twitter
and YouTube and Facebook.
That was Laura Reese,
director of the Center for Technology Policy
and Senior Research Fellow for Homeland Security
here at the Heritage Foundation.
Laura, thank you so much for your time.
Thank you.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
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