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Roles and Responsibilities of Information Intermediaries

Wolfgang Schulz
Thursday, November 14, 2019, 11:26 AM

Platforms’ ability to assess the context of content plays a major role in determining whether “new school regulation” sets proportional limits to freedom of speech.   

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While many countries have initially opted to give online platforms a “safe harbor,” for speech, we are now witnessing trends to weaken that protection. In Europe, this includes the creation of regulatory regimes that aim at reducing misinformation and that specifically address the role of social media platforms and other information intermediaries. Regulatory attempts such as the German Network Enforcement Act (NetzDG) can serve as an example. The paper analyzes those approaches from a human-rights perspective and argues that the platforms’ ability to assess the context of content plays a major role in determining whether “new school regulation” sets proportional limits to freedom of speech.


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Wolfgang Schulz is director of Leibniz Institut for Media Research at the Hans-Bredow-Institut and Professor of Media Law, Public Law and Legal Theory at the University of Hamburg, he is also Director of the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society in Berlin and holds the UNESCO Chair for Freedom of Information and Communication.

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