On March 23, Craigslist decided to
do away with personal
ads. Last week, Microsoft announced plans to make it illegal to
get naked on Skype. The company is also out to ban any “offensive
language” from Xbox and Office. Reddit has changed its content
policy as well: Now the site explicitly forbids users from
advertising paid services including “physical sexual contact” on
its platform.
And it’s not just the big names that are making such urgent
amendments. Pounced.org, a
dating website for those into Furry
Fandom, just shut down.
While some companies acknowledge it
and some don’t,
this trend appears to be spreading in anticipation of a sweeping
piece of federal legislation that could soon become law.
Enter FOSTA,
or the Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act. The bill intends to amend
Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA),
which prevents online intermediaries from being held liable for their
users’ actions. The legislation was passed by the House of
Representatives in late February. By late March, the Senate had voted
to advance the measure (SESTA).
It just needs Trump’s signature to be passed. Needless to say, tech
companies and Internet freedom activists aren’t pleased.
Section 230 has governed the
Internet for the past 22 years, which is why major platforms like
Craigslist, Reddit and Microsoft have been able to host content that
toes the legal line. But that kind of immunity became a significant
point of contention in 2016, when the CEO of an online classifieds ad
company called Backpage.com was arrested for helping facilitate child
sex trafficking. A judge eventually dismissed the case, ruling that
Section 230 ultimately protected
the company. The law prevented the prosecution from going after
the company, so politicians decided to go after the law instead.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation,
a nonprofit organization designed to defend civil liberties in the
digital world, says FOSTA will force online platforms to become “much
more restrictive in what sorts of discussion—and
what sorts of users—they allow, censoring innocent people in
the process.” Other advocates for free speech say the
measure violates
the first amendment. Of course, there’s a sector of the U.S.
workforce that stands to lose pay and basic safety protections if
this measure goes into place: sex workers.
“Since their invention, online
forums for advertisements and community-building have been essential
to sex worker survival,” says Liz Afton, a counselor at the Sex
Workers Project, an initiative of New York City’s Urban Justice
Center (UJC), which provides legal and social services to people
involved in sex work. “The bill strips away their access to online
platforms that allow them to post advertisements for employment
opportunities, build community with other sex workers, and share
safety materials such as Bad Date lists—a life-saving resource that
alerts other sex workers to predatory individuals so they can avoid
dangerous interactions.”
Afton tells In
These Times that
taking away the ability to contact clients from home will effectively
force sex workers back onto the street, where they risk exposure to
police violence, street harassment, cold weather and inebriated
clients. It also places sex workers in high-pressure environments,
where they may not be able to negotiate things like compensation and
condom use as effectively as they could online.
Moving offline also makes members
of marginalized communities more visible to
police and potentially problematic clients. It’s not uncommon for
workers who are transgender, disabled, and people of color to rely on
web buffers to stay safe.
“Being arrested for ‘walking
while black,’ or ‘walking while trans’ is outrageously common,”
Red, a queer, non-binary sex worker and community organizer, tells In
These Times.
“Advertising
online is a method of harm reduction. If sex workers can
access affordable and reliable methods of advertising
and screening clients, they are better able to work in-doors and in
conditions they feel safer. Sharing client experiences and
information is a method of harm reduction. Being able to communicate
online about surviving violence and seeking resources is a
method of harm reduction.”
“Losing the ability to organize,
communicate and generate income by advertising puts sex-working
people at risk for loss of work, violence, and cuts people off from
larger online communities,” they add. “It threatens free speech
but, more importantly, it threatens the bodily autonomy and
self-determination of sex working people.”
The impact FOSTA will have on those
involved in consensual
sex work is obvious, and ominous. Of course, proponents of
the bill argue that taking away access to platforms where sex
services can be advertised is necessary to combat illegal sex
trafficking. But critics fear the ostensible attempt to target
traffickers will end up doing more to silence
their victims, instead. Big-name companies that can afford to
track libelous content will likely do so by way of imperfect
algorithms. The language victims of sex trafficking may use in
telling their stories, or even outing perpetrators, could be easily
confused with the language used by the traffickers themselves.
Computers, after all, aren’t so great at picking up context.
“What's most important
here should be centering the voices of people doing sex
work and in the trade, and who are survivors of trafficking, who know
what's best for their well-being and futures,” says Red. “If
politicians actually listened to sex workers on how to help support
survivors who have experienced the violence of trafficking,
there would moratoriums on raids and arrests, expanded access to
emergency immigrant visas, expanded housing, food and cash assistance
programs for starters.”
>> The article above was written by Carrie Weisman, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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