Sunday, April 7, 2013

Twitter, hate speech, and the costs of keeping quiet





(Credit: James Martin/CNET)

This is a guest column. See below for Greg Lukianoff's bio.




Last month was a bittersweet seventh birthday for Twitter. The Union of Jewish French Students sued the social-media giant for $50 million in a French court in light of anti-Semitic tweets that caried the hashtag #unbonjuif ("a good Jew"). In January, Twitter agreed to delete the tweets, but the student group now wants the identities of the users who sent the anti-Semitic messages so that they can be prosecuted under French law against hate speech. Twitter is resisting. It claims that as an American company protected by the First Amendment, it does not have to aid government efforts to control offensive speech.




Internationally, America is considered radical for protecting speech that is highly offensive. But even in the U.S., Twitter should not be surprised to discover ambivalence and even outright hostility toward its principled aversion to censorship, especially in that once great institution for the open exchange of ideas: American higher education.




"Hate speech" is constitutionally protected in the United States. But the push against "hurtful" and "blasphemous" speech... [Read more]










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