THE ETHICS OF SOCIAL MEDIA: WHY CONTENT MODERATION IS A MORAL DUTY

被引:0
|
作者
Howard, Jeffrey w. [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL, London, England
来源
JOURNAL OF PRACTICAL ETHICS | 2024年 / 11卷 / 02期
关键词
social media; content moderation; free speech;
D O I
10.3998/jpe.6195
中图分类号
B82 [伦理学(道德学)];
学科分类号
摘要
This article defends platforms' moral responsibility to moderate wrongful speech posted by users. Several duties together ground and shape this responsibility. First, platforms have duties to defend others from harm when they can do so at reasonable cost. Second, platforms have a moral duty to avoid complicity with users' wrongfully harmful or dangerous speech. I will argue that one can be complicit in wrongs committed by others by supplying them with a space in which they will foreseeably commit them. For platforms, proactive content moderation is required to avoid such complicity. Further, platforms have an especially stringent complicity-based duty not to amplify users' wrongful speech, thereby increasing its harm or danger. Finally, platforms have a duty not to enable new wrongs by amplifying otherwise innocuous speech that becomes wrongfully harmful only through amplification. I close by considering an objection-that content moderation by platforms constitutes an objectionable form of private censorship-explaining how it can be answered.
引用
收藏
页码:33 / 52
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条