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The Lawfare Podcast

Working Toward Transparency and Accountability in Content Moderation

The Lawfare Podcast

The Lawfare Institute

International Law, Law, Government, Foreign Policy, News, Politics, Rule Of Law, International Relations, Current Events, Military, Constitutional Law, Intelligence, National Security, History, Terrorism, Diplomacy

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 23 December 2021

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

 In 2018, a group of academics and free expression advocates convened in Santa Clara, California, for a workshop. They emerged with the Santa Clara Principles on Transparency and Accountability in Content Moderation—a high level list of procedural steps that social media companies should take when making decisions about the content on their services. The principles quickly became influential, earning the endorsement of a number of major technology companies like Facebook.

Three years later, a second, more detailed edition of the principles has just been released—the product of a broader consultation process. So what’s changed? This week on Arbiters of Truth, our series on the online information ecosystem, Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic spoke with David Greene, senior staff attorney and civil liberties director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. At EFF, he’s been centrally involved in the creation of version 2.0 of the principles. They talked about what motivated the effort to put together a new edition and what role he sees the principles playing in the conversation around content moderation. And they discussed amicus briefs that EFF has filed in the ongoing litigation over social media regulation laws passed by Texas and Florida.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

The following podcast contains advertising to access an ad-free version of the LawFair

0:07.2

podcast become a material supporter of LawFair at patreon.com slash LawFair.

0:14.7

That's patreon.com slash LawFair.

0:18.2

Also, check out LawFair's other podcast offerings, rational security, chatter, LawFair

0:25.6

no bull and the aftermath.

0:32.1

Right laptop, I'm ready to finish this thesis.

0:34.2

What thesis?

0:35.2

The one I've spent two years working on.

0:36.7

Don't have it.

0:37.7

What's the last version you saved?

0:39.4

Got final version, final final version, and no, I'm actually serious now.

0:42.9

This is the last version I will never save another version I promise, version two.

0:46.7

Surely that one?

0:47.7

No.

0:48.7

Why?

0:49.7

It's corrupted.

0:50.7

For when you upgrade to an acochrome book, they come with Google Drive built-in so you'll

0:57.2

never lose a file again.

0:58.7

And save.

0:59.7

Already saved.

1:00.7

Oh, thanks.

1:01.7

Saved it again.

...

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