YouTube’s New Policy Provides Cause for Concern
You may see media
coverage of the adoption by YouTube of a new firearms content policy that
has the potential to affect our industry and your business.
YouTube’s announcement this week of a new firearms content policy is
troubling. We suspect it will be interpreted to block much more
content than the stated goal of firearms and certain accessory sales.
Especially worrisome is the potential for blocking educational content that
serves an instructional and skill-building purpose. YouTube’s policy
announcement has also served to invite political activists to flood their
review staff with complaints about any video to which they may proffer
manufactured outrage.
Much like Facebook, YouTube now acts as a virtual public square. The
exercise of what amounts to censorship, then, can legitimately be viewed as
the stifling of commercial free speech, which has constitutional
protection. Such actions also impinge on the Second Amendment.
Facebook Precedent
In what we see as a parallel
situation, Facebook has repeatedly shut down the pages of legitimate and
reputable firearms retailers that were following Facebook’s own
rules. The interpretation depended on the reviewers, the vast
majority of whom have little familiarity with our business practices, let
alone our products, and many of whom do not even do their work from
American soil.
Both First and Second Amendment rights are essential to the liberty we
enjoy as American citizens. In a very real sense, the de facto curtailment
of First Amendment right of its firearm related business users, YouTube is
edging toward simultaneously infringing upon the Second Amendment rights of
the customers of these affected businesses.
Commerce in Firearms is Essential
As Circuit Judge Diarmuid
O’Scannlain wrote in his 36-page
opinion, “Our forefathers recognized that the prohibition of commerce in
firearms worked to undermine the right to keep and bear arms.”
This argument can be logically extended to social media platforms. It is
time that social media platform management realizes its broader collective
responsibility since it commands so much of today’s virtual public square.
Suppressing the expression of First Amendment protected political speech
and of commercial speech is wrong, even if they think they are acting in
the public interest. The resulting impingement of lawful commerce in
firearms that brings with it the infringement of Second Amendment rights is
equally wrong and it should stop.
Tell YouTube that this
new policy is a cause for concern. Ask that its implementation and review
process be fair, fully informed and respectful of your business.
Please be polite and remember that the person on the other end will likely
know little about firearms. Provide comments
directly to YouTube.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment