Republican Sen. Mike Lee said fact-checking is a form of censorship

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During a Senate hearing on Wednesday, Republican Sen. Mike Lee said fact-checking is a form of censorship.

The hearing was held with the CEOs of Twitter, Facebook, and Google to discuss Section 230 and Republicans' concerns about censorship online.

All three CEOs defended their policies, saying they are intended to be applied equally to anyone who violates their content policies, regardless of their political opinions.

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The Senate commerce committee held the hearing with CEOs of Twitter, Facebook, and Google to discuss Section 230 and Republicans' concerns about censorship online — they've accused the companies of discriminating against conservative views on their platforms.

Lee, the senior US senator from Utah, addressed the CEOs about their content-moderation policies, which he said were disproportionately applied to conservative ideologies. He defined what he considered "censorship" in regard to the way content is treated on these platforms.

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"When I use the word 'censor' here, I'm meaning blocked content, fact-check, or labeled content, or demonetized websites of conservative, Republican, or pro-life individuals or groups or companies," Lee said.

He went on to say that he did not see the same suppression of high-profile liberal politicians or commentators.

The four-hour hearing was called to discuss Section 230, which effectively protects social-media companies from being held responsible for content published on their platforms. Some Republicans, including President Donald Trump, have called for its repeal, a move that could have severe consequences for tech companies.

During the hearing, Senate Republicans focused on the tech companies' efforts to fact-check Trump's tweets with false or misleading information, particularly about COVID-19 and the election.

Earlier this year, Twitter and Facebook both began fact-checking or labeling posts from Trump, among others.

Republican concerns about censorship on social media were sparked again earlier this month when Twitter limited the sharing of a controversial New York Post story about Hunter Biden. The Post's Twitter account is still locked.

milo7even on October 29th, 2020 at 12:14 UTC »

Let me see if I understand the logic...

I could say that right at this very minute, as I type this, I am fucking Mike Lee’s wife’s brains out on their dining table.

And Lee could respond with a time stamped freshly taken photo of himself and his wife at that dining table to prove me factually incorrect - and I’d be entirely within my rights to yell censorship and that he is denying me my right to free speech?

mechapoitier on October 29th, 2020 at 11:24 UTC »

Texas Senator and blobfish impersonator Ted Cruz said the same thing yesterday framing lying to voters as a free speech issue. The whole GOP is in on that now.

Republicans don’t believe in freedom of speech; they just want to be free to lie to you. In this case the GOP wants to legally force private businesses (Facebook, Twitter, etc) to let them lie to you.

Stigmetal110 on October 29th, 2020 at 10:59 UTC »

Yes, when your whole worldview is based on bullshit and lies I imagine that fact-checking might be a problem for you.