U.S. House passes bill to penalize websites for sex
trafficking
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[February 28, 2018]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of
Representatives on Tuesday overwhelmingly passed legislation to make it
easier to penalize operators of websites that facilitate online sex
trafficking, chipping away at a bedrock legal shield for the technology
industry.
The bill's passage marks one of the most concrete actions in recent
years from the U.S. Congress to tighten regulation of internet firms,
which have drawn heavy scrutiny from lawmakers in both parties over the
past year due to an array of concerns regarding the size and influence
of their platforms.
The House passed the measure 388-25. It still needs to pass the U.S.
Senate, where similar legislation has already gained substantial
support, and then be signed by President Donald Trump before it can
become law.
Speaker Paul Ryan, in a statement before the vote, said the bill would
help "put an end to modern-day slavery here in the United States."
The White House issued a statement generally supportive of the bill, but
said the administration "remains concerned" about certain provisions
that it hopes can be resolved in the final legislation.
Several major internet companies, including Alphabet Inc's Google and
Facebook Inc, had been reluctant to support any congressional effort to
dent what is known as Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a
decades-old law that protects them from liability for the activities of
their users.
But facing political pressure, the internet industry slowly warmed to a
proposal that gained traction in the Senate last year, and eventually
endorsed it after it gained sizeable bipartisan support.
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The U.S. Capitol Building is lit at sunset in Washington, U.S.,
December 20, 2016. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Republican Senator Rob Portman, a chief architect of the Senate
proposal, said in a statement he supported the House's similar version
and called on the Senate to quickly pass it.
The legislation is a result of years of law-enforcement lobbying for a
crackdown on the online classified site backpage.com, which is used for
sex advertising.
It would make it easier for states and sex-trafficking victims to sue
social media networks, advertisers and others that fail to keep
exploitative material off their platforms.
Some critics warned that the House measure would weaken Section 230 in a
way that would only serve to further help established internet giants,
who possess larger resources to police their content, and not adequately
address the problem.
"This bill will only prop up the entrenched players who are rapidly
losing the public’s trust," Democratic Senator Ron Wyden, an original
author of Section 230, said. "The failure to understand the
technological side effects of this bill - specifically that it will
become harder to expose sex-traffickers, while hamstringing innovation -
will be something that this Congress will regret."
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; editing by Sandra Maler and Lisa Shumaker)
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