Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Fists of Ham: Why the Liberals Keep Trying (and Failing) to Control the Internet

Fists of Ham: Why the Liberals Keep Trying (and Failing) to Control the Internet

"There are solid national security reasons for the U.S. Congress to fret about TikTok and its ties to the Chinese Communist Party. Plenty of evidence suggests TikTok exerts a malign influence over political debate in the U.S. and other Western countries. The sheer volume and imbalance of anti-Israel/pro-Palestinian rhetoric on the social media platform, for example, has many observers suggesting its algorithms and moderation techniques are calibrated to deliberately drive new wedges into American politics at China’s behest. A recent essay in the Jewish Review of Books calls TikTok “an instrument of Chinese antagonism towards the United States.” Even Canada requested a security review of TikTok last September...

While TikTok’s direct Chinese connection is concerning and relevant in and of itself, Trump is right to worry about the things that TikTok, Facebook and virtually all other commercial internet businesses have in common, namely the manner in which they collect and traffic in their users’ data – i.e., our data. Without transparent, reliable and ironclad safeguards to protect the personal details that users share inadvertently and habitually throughout their day-to-day interactions with these companies, as well as the manner in which that information is re-used, re-sold or otherwise manipulated, we are all powerless to control our own online destinies. They know what we like, where we go and what we are thinking. No government has a right to all that information; why, then, should the owners of social media platforms have it?

Rather than grapple with these fundamental issues, however, Trudeau and his revolving circus of ministers in the Heritage and Justice portfolios have instead tried to “manage” the internet’s end-user experience. A trifecta of flawed bills has sought to restrict how Canadians can express themselves online – and thus put an end to the internet as an unregulated forum for the free exchange of ideas. And while the TikTok dilemma is not of the Trudeau government’s own making, these three bills certainly are.

The first of these three foolish foundation stones was laid with the Online Streaming Act, also known as Bill C-11...

Others saw Bill C-11 as a 1980s-style effort to bring the wide-open internet under the control of the notoriously meddlesome and hidebound Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). In an effort to impose Canadian-content rules on major streaming services such as Netflix or Amazon Prime, the bill sets criteria and extracts funds to “support Canadian artists and creative industries, advance Indigenous storytelling and increase representation of equity-seeking groups.” The Trudeau government, in other words, is using it as yet another way to favour designated groups whose approval it craves and further impose wokism on Canadians.

In doing so, the Online Streaming Act also threatens to bring the entire independent podcasting world to heel. While individual digital creators are not directly regulated by the act, the streaming companies who host them are, and it is entirely reasonable – if not fully expected – that these firms will censor and bully those independent voices into following Ottawa’s direction. It is exactly the sort of top-down, elitist-driven scheme to which the internet is properly allergic.

The response to these likely consequences from online creators and content providers has been deafening... He and his colleagues, McCullough explained, are “often very entrepreneurial, very self‑directed people that have started from very little and have become very successful.” They don’t want or need Ottawa’s heavy hand on their shoulder – or in their wallet.

The Trudeau brain trust’s next assault on the internet turned out to be a failure of epic proportions – hurting the very industry it was supposed to help. Bill C-18, the Online News Act, was meant to ameliorate the financial problems of the mainstream media by extracting cash from Google and Facebook to hand over to those failing businesses. This was to be accomplished by forcing the two social media giants to pay for the privilege of hosting online links to news stories from the legacy outlets. While Google agreed to pay $100 million into this scheme, Facebook-owner Meta took the opposite approach and stopped posting news links entirely.

Meta’s move immediately severed a key connection between online readers and news publishers and did far more damage in terms of lost marketing power than was gained from Google’s outlay. According to the CBC’s Third Quarter Financial Report, for example, “Digital reach for CBC is trending below target due to Meta’s news withdrawal in Canada.” Traffic at the English language website dropped by 23 percent year-over-year, all of which can be ascribed to the Facebook news link ban. Far from “stealing” the legacy media’s content, as alleged, the social media giants were clearly helping them reach their audiences. Globe and Mail columnist Andrew Coyne called the legislation “a transparent shakedown operation.” The real purpose, Coyne observed, could be summarized by the observation that “the platforms have money, and the media want some.”

St-Onge’s immediate predecessor, Pablo Rodriguez, used to brag that the “world is watching” Canada’s efforts to manage the internet. Unfortunately for everyone involved, he was right. So closely, it turns out, that not only did the Online News Act cost the domestic news industry a great deal of money, it hurt other countries as well. In 2021 the Australian government cajoled Facebook and Google into making payments to news providers in what might be considered a test run of Canada’s Bill C-18. But Meta was so pleased with how its business proceeded after its news link ban in Canada that it subsequently notified publishers in Australia that it plans to end its deal with them as well...

Having thus damaged the news industry on two continents, Trudeau’s government decided to again reach beyond its intellectual grasp and turn what could have been a perfectly useful piece of legislation dealing with the most problematic aspects of the internet into a dystopian mess. Say hello to Bill C-63, the Online Harms Act, unveiled in February. Promoted as being necessary to “protect children” from a cesspool of online content, the bill actually comprises two distinct and wholly unrelated halves. One good, one evil.

The first part sets up mechanisms to shield vulnerable children from inappropriate content online, as well as to protect victims of online sex crimes, such as the unauthorized sharing of sexually-intimate videos. Unfortunately, this entirely legitimate goal was then welded onto a despicable attempt at suppressing free speech in Canada.

The “evil-twin” portion of the bill seeks to stamp out “hate” within Canada by creating new speech and thought crimes and by setting up an ominously named Digital Safety Commissioner. Expressions considered hateful by the courts will be made punishable by up to life in prison. What constitutes “hate”? According to the bill, hate speech is defined as “detestation or vilification of an individual or group of individuals.” It is not, however, “disdain or dislike.” Got that?

The promotion of genocide is dealt with in an equally severe manner, but defined in an equally vague way. (Could legitimate research into Canada’s Indian Residential Schools disputing claims of genocide be considered illegal? Who knows?) Further, the courts can order house arrest for anyone suspected of intending to commit a future hate crime. And the bill revives the thoroughly discredited and properly abandoned concept of Section 13 of the Canadian Human Rights Act by allowing anonymous hate-speech “victims” to bring complaints against anyone who has said something they consider offensive, and in the process enrich themselves with cash awards.

Apparently lulled into a catatonic state by the aspects of the bill that protect children, many Canadian commentators were initially supportive of C-63. Coyne, for example, initially gave it “One Cheer”. But then outside voices began to weigh in. Britain’s The Telegraph, for example, talked of Canada’s “descent into tyranny”. According to columnist David Collins, “For Canadians, Trudeau’s Online Harms Act will [result in] a tightly-monitored police state more suited to North Korea than North America. It will harm more people than it protects.” The Spectator, another British publication, was similarly outraged:

“The stated intent of the Bill is something every decent person supports: protecting children from online victimization. Yet behind this noble aim lurk the thought police.

This is no exaggeration. This legislation authorizes house arrest and electronic tagging for a person considered likely to commit a future crime. It’s right there in the text: if a judge believes there are reasonable grounds to ‘fear’ a future hate crime, the as of yet innocent party can be sentenced to house arrest, complete with electronic tagging, mandatory drug testing and communication bans.”

Prominent U.S. free speech advocate Jonathan Turley, a professor at George Washington University Law School and frequent expert witness on First Amendment issues to the U.S. Congress, told Fox News the bill represents a “doubling down on Canada’s commitment to reducing free speech.”...

As for the reaction among elected politicians, the federal NDP are big fans of the bill and the Bloc Québécois want to make it even tougher. Only the Conservatives seem to recognize its slippery, dual-headed nature...

Amid all the embarrassing missteps and ham-handedness of the Justin Trudeau government’s entire internet policy package, a crucial question arises. Why? What makes a government turn a streaming act designed to force Netflix to support Canadian film and TV production into one with implicit authority over all podcasts? How does a bill designed to make web giants support news organizations wind up wreaking financial harm on what remains of the independent press? And who takes the concept of protecting vulnerable children and twists it into an internationally-decried assault on free speech? Meanwhile, why is no one doing anything to address the real online issues of data collection, trafficking and storage? The Liberals are essentially bringing a hammer down on how Canadians use the internet at home while ignoring the much bigger problems backstage.

In a search for answers, I sought out three experts for their opinions on how the Liberals lost their minds over the internet. Timothy Denton, a consultant and former CRTC Commissioner, says leaders in Canada and elsewhere have become nervous about the manner in which the internet has freed citizens from their control. “Governments everywhere in the western world are engaged in programs that are malign by intention and can only be made to work…by the repression of people’s capacity to see, perceive and organize,” he explained via email. The three bills, in other words, are part of a concerted effort to curtail independent thought. “I think this is becoming increasingly clear to many, many people, and from their point of view, this ability must be hampered and stopped.”

Len St-Aubin, a long-time regulatory consultant, sees part of the problem arising from a weakening of the policy-making process within the public service that began during Stephen Harper’s Conservative government. “The problem is the total politicization of policy making grounded in short-term thinking, and the corresponding demise of evidence-based policy making,” St-Aubin says. “The Libs either inherited a public service with greatly diminished policy making capacity, or chose to adopt the same echo chamber policy-making model.” (Then again, the Harper government did repeal Section 13 of the Human Rights Act, which was being misused to suppress unpopular opinions.)

Putting political considerations ahead of serving the public is a recurring pattern for the Trudeau government, argues St-Aubin. “Bill C-11 was driven by, and ultimately sought to benefit, private sector broadcasters and independent producers who depend on regulations” for their livelihood, he says. “That was almost certainly driven by political motivation, rather than any policy analysis within the public service. The same is definitely the case with the Online News Act. And both are proving to be abject failures.”

As president of the Internet Society Canada Chapter, Philip Palmer has appeared before the House of Commons Heritage Committee and its Senate counterpart to speak to the government’s internet legislation. He is also an Ottawa-based internet and telecommunications lawyer and former Senior General Counsel with the Department of Justice. To understand the Trudeau government’s approach, Palmer says, it’s best to look to mindset rather than motivation.

“In my view, the problem with the Liberal government is the sin of pride,” says Palmer. “They see themselves as virtuous and, in consequence of this self-understanding, the initiatives they undertake reflect virtue as they would have it. Of course, if they are virtuous, and their political actions reflect virtue, then opposing those measures is anti-virtuous – possibly even evil. The Liberals compound the sin of pride with that of sloth: they seem unable or unwilling to examine their actions against real-world reality. They do not take the trouble to see potential virtue in their opponents’ point of view – as of course their opponents, by definition, lack their virtue.”

Palmer points to how all of the Trudeau government’s legislation tends to go beyond the necessary initial objectives and grant sweeping powers to various non-government authorities such as the CRTC, Human Rights Tribunal, Digital Safety Commission or, through Criminal Code amendments, the police and Crown prosecutors. It’s a pattern, he says, that comes down to “simple lack of imagination.” As Palmer puts it, “They can neither imagine that they are capable of doing harm, nor that in the course of experienced life others will come to hold the levers of power and be able to use those unrestrained powers for purposes that are entirely foreseeable but beyond their ken.”

If Palmer is right, and sinful pride is at the heart of Trudeau’s legislative assaults on Canadians’ liberty, then perhaps the unfolding crisis over TikTok and the three online-related laws are omens of a fall yet to come. Considering TikTok, note that the platform is wildly popular among those who graduated from high school after the turn of the century. The Online Streaming Act’s shortcomings primarily befall this demographic cohort as well. Comprising Millennials and Gen Z, they now outnumber their parents, the once-dominant Baby Boomers. They are also the first generation to have grown up with the internet. Plus, seventy percent of TikTok’s users are under 40 and the majority are female. That’s not only the dream demographic for advertisers, it’s also the segment of the population that, in the 2015 federal election, most enthusiastically threw its support behind Trudeau and his “sunny ways”.

Now, having watched their dreams of home ownership crumble on Trudeau’s watch and witnessed his bungled efforts at legislating the internet, this group also seems to be suffering the most from buyer’s remorse. If current polls are to believed, it appears Millennials have shifted their allegiance in spectacular fashion and are now almost twice as likely to support Poilievre’s Conservatives as they are Trudeau’s Liberals."

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