Facebook, Google, Others' Encryption Said to Be Threatened by Planned New US Bill

The bill aims to fight child sexual abuse material on Facebook and Google's by making them liable for prosecution.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 22 February 2020 11:57 IST
Highlights
  • The bill will end the protection offered by a law called Section 230
  • The law shields certain platforms from being treated as the publisher
  • It also protects them from liability involving content posted by users

The bill will threaten a key immunity these companies have under a federal law

US legislation will be introduced in the coming weeks that could hurt technology companies' ability to offer end-to-end encryption, two sources with knowledge of the matter said, and it aims to curb the distribution of child sexual abuse material on such platforms.

The bill, proposed by the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal, aims to fight such material on platforms like Facebook and Alphabet's Google by making them liable for state prosecution and civil lawsuits. It does so by threatening a key immunity the companies have under federal law called Section 230.

This law shields certain online platforms from being treated as the publisher or speaker of information they publish, and largely protects them from liability involving content posted by users.

Advertisement

The bill, titled "The Eliminating Abuse and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies Act of 2019," or the "EARN IT Act," threatens this key immunity unless companies comply with a set of "best practices," which will be determined by a 15-member commission led by the Attorney General.

Advertisement

The move is the latest example of how regulators and lawmakers in Washington are reconsidering the need for incentives that once helped online companies grow, but are increasingly viewed as impediments to curbing online crime, hate speech and extremism.

The sources said the U.S. tech industry fears these "best practices" will be used to condemn end-to-end encryption - a technology for privacy and security that scrambles messages so that they can be deciphered only by the sender and intended recipient. Federal law enforcement agencies have complained that such encryption hinders their investigations.

Advertisement

Online platforms are exempted from letting law enforcement access their encrypted networks. The proposed legislation provides a workaround to bypass that, the sources said.

"This a deeply dangerous and flawed piece of legislation that will put every American's security at risk... it is deeply irresponsible to try to undermine security for online communications," said Jesse Blumenthal, who leads technology and innovation at Stand Together, also known as the Koch network -funded by billionaire Charles Koch. The group sides with tech companies that have come under fire from lawmakers and regulators in Washington.

Advertisement

"There is no such thing as a back door just for good guys that does not create a front door for bad guys," Blumenthal said.

On Wednesday, U.S. Attorney General William Barr questioned whether Facebook, Google and other major online platforms still need the immunity from legal liability that has prevented them from being sued over material their users post.

During a Senate Judiciary hearing on encryption in December, a bipartisan group of senators warned tech companies that they must design their products' encryption to comply with court orders. Senator Graham issued a warning to Facebook and Apple: "This time next year, if we haven't found a way that you can live with, we will impose our will on you."

A spokeswoman for Senator Graham said "on timing, other details, we don't have anything more to add right now." She pointed Reuters to recent comments by the senator saying the legislation is "not ready" but "getting close."

A spokeswoman for Senator Blumenthal said he was encouraged by the progress made by the bill.

A discussion draft of the EARN IT Act has been doing the rounds and has been criticized by technology companies.

Facebook and Google did not respond to requests for comment.

© Thomson Reuters 2020

 

Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.

Further reading: Facebook, Google, Alphabet
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Oppo Will Launch the Reno 15 Series in India on This Date
  2. Realme 16 Pro Series Roundup: Expected Price in India, Launch Timeline and More
  3. Perplexity CEO Says On-Device AI Can Disrupt the Data Centre Industry
  4. Redmi Note 15 5G Series India Launch: All You Need to Know
  5. Motorola Signature Spotted With Stylus in Leaked Marketing Image
  6. Samsung Galaxy A57 5G Appears on BIS Website, Could Launch in India Soon
  7. Moto X70 Air Pro Listed on Certification Website With These Features
  8. OnePlus Nord 6 Launch Appears Imminent as Smartphone Visits TDRA Website
  9. Poco M8 5G Display, Chipset Details Confirmed Ahead of India Launch
  10. Honor Power 2 AnTuTu Score, Colourways Teased Ahead of January 5 Launch
  1. Honor Power 2 AnTuTu Benchmark Score, Colourways Teased Ahead of January 5 China Launch
  2. Instagram Will Have to Evolve Fast, Warns Adam Mosseri Amid Rise of AI Content
  3. Apple Vision Pro Production, Marketing Said to be Scaled Back Due to Low Sales
  4. Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas Says On-Device AI Can Disrupt the Data Centre Industry
  5. AI Can Reportedly Take Away More Than 2 Lakh Banking Jobs by 2030
  6. Astronomers Decode the Strange Behaviour of a Young Star 1,950 Light-Years Away
  7. Runaway Stars Help Astronomers Trace Dark Matter Distribution Across the Milky Way Galaxy
  8. Poco M8 5G Confirmed to Feature 3D Curved Display and Snapdragon 6 Gen 3 Chip; Software Policy Announced
  9. Samsung Galaxy A57 5G Appears on BIS Website, Could Launch in India Soon
  10. Samsung Wants to Integrate AI Into All Devices, Says DX Division Head TM Roh
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.