Sen. Feinstein Shouldn鈥檛 Make Tech Companies Do the Government鈥檚 National Security Job for It
When a legislator offers a bad legislative idea, I love it when the outcry is so loud, so immediate, that it falls off the radar with nary a whimper.
That was the case this summer when Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) tried to fold an into the Intelligence Authorization bill that would have required technology companies to report online 鈥漷errorist activity.鈥 Sure, it sounds like a good idea, but as my colleague Gabe Rottman wrote, the mandate was incredibly vague and would have encouraged companies to report online activity of wholly innocent individuals who had no connection to terrorism whatsoever. The provision was quietly removed from the bill due to outcry from , , and even certain .
It鈥檚 a mistake to require social media companies to act as arms of the national security state.
You鈥檇 think that would be the end of it. But here鈥檚 what I don鈥檛 like so much about bad legislative ideas: When they turn up like a bad penny, especially at times of crisis when politicians think they can ram through a proposal that couldn鈥檛 pass at a time when cooler heads prevail.
But, determined to regurgitate her proposal in the wake of the terrible attacks in Paris and San Bernardino in recent weeks, Sen. Feinstein just introduced with precisely the same language that was rejected over the summer.
It鈥檚 a mistake to require social media companies to act as arms of the national security state. It鈥檚 not their job. It鈥檚 not what they do best. The government already monitors much of this information, since so much social media content is in the public domain already.
This proposal failed once when everyone was thinking rationally about the risks of terrorist attacks. We shouldn鈥檛 let the passions of the moment direct us down a different path 鈥 one that won鈥檛 solve the terrorist problem but will impact the speech rights of untold numbers of wholly innocent social media users.