Big Tech
Growing Lineup of Divergent Speakers, Panelists and Sponsors at Big Tech & Speech Summit
In a two-day “flash sale,” registration for the event on March 9 will cost $99. Sale ends 11:59 p.m. Wed.
WASHINGTON, February 14, 2023 — The future of online speech and technological innovation in the United States is very much in flux. Everyone wants to be on the side of “free speech.” But online platforms are increasingly viewed as a source of real-world harms and a threat to individual privacy.
That’s why now — during a two-day flash sale – is the best time to register to attend Broadband Breakfast’s upcoming Big Tech & Speech Summit. The event will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 9, 2023 in Washington, D.C.
Broadband Breakfast is excited to announce its first round of speakers, panelists and sponsors, showcasing the diversity of opinion represented at this must-attend event.
Panelists will include Amy Peikoff, head of policy and legal for Parler, and Steve DelBianco, president and CEO of NetChoice, as well as experts from the Center for Democracy & Technology, American Enterprise Institute, Future of Privacy Forum, Electronic Frontier Foundation and more.
The event will also feature addresses from Eli Noam, director of the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information, and John Samples, vice president of the Cato Institute and a member of Facebook’s Oversight Board.
Sponsors of the event include both NetChoice and Texas.net, Inc., two organizations that take highly divergent approaches to questions of Section 230 and tech platforms’ approach to free speech.
Take advantage of the ‘flash sale’ and get access to the Breakfast Club
Those who register for the Big Tech & Speech Summit by February 15 at 11:59 p.m. PST will be able to purchase a day-long pass to the summit — including breakfast and lunch — for only $99. That’s just a third of the full $299 registration cost.
Additionally, registered attendees (including “flash sale” registrants) will receive two months’ access to the Breakfast Club, a $198 value.
The Breakfast Club is Broadband Breakfast’s membership service for tech industry professionals, offering premium content, in-depth reports, group coaching and more. Membership also includes exclusive unlimited access to video recordings of the Big Tech & Speech Summit, as well as past and future conferences.
About the Big Tech & Speech Summit
In a January 11 op-ed, President Joe Biden made the case that “The risks Big Tech poses for ordinary Americans are clear,” and alleged widespread harms including cyberstalking, child sexual exploitation, worsening mental health and “toxic online echo chambers.” The President presented a three-fold challenge to Big Tech on Section 230, privacy and competition.
Broadband Breakfast’s Big Tech & Speech Summit will tackle all three of these subjects, beginning with an introductory Panel 1 on the big picture involving Big Tech. This will be followed by sessions on Section 230, privacy and competition.
The agenda as of February 14 is below. Visit Big Tech & Speech Summit for the updated program speakers and sponsors.
Welcome and Introduction (8:30 a.m.) – Drew Clark, Editor and Publisher, Broadband Breakfast
PANEL 1: THE BIG PICTURE FOR BIG TECH (9:30 a.m.)
- Ellery Roberts Biddle, Senior Editor, Coda Media
- Amy Peikoff, Head of Policy and Legal, Parler
- Steve DelBianco, President & CEO, NetChoice
- Willmary Escoto, U.S. Policy Analyst, Access Now
- Others have been invited
Mini Keynotes
- Eli Noam, Director, Columbia Institute for Tele-Information
- John Samples, Vice President, Cato Institute and Member of Facebook’s Oversight Board
PANEL 2: THE FRAGILITY OF SECTION 230 (10:45 a.m.)
- Cathy Gellis, Attorney
- Ashley Johnson, Senior Policy Analyst, Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
- Emma Llansó, Director, Free Expression Project, Center for Democracy & Technology
- Ron Yokubaitis, Founder, Texas.net, Inc.
- Others have been invited
PANEL 3: REGULATING DATA PRIVACY (1:00 p.m.)
- John Verdi, Senior Vice President of Policy, Future of Privacy Forum (moderator)
- Shane Tews, Nonresident Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
- India McKinney, Director of Federal Affairs, Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Others have been invited
PANEL 4: INNOVATION, COMPETITION AND FUTURE TECH (2:15 p.m.)
- Adam Kovacevich, CEO, Chamber of Progress
- Christine Bannan, U.S. Public Policy Manager, Proton
- Berin Szóka, President, TechFreedom Foundation
- Others have been invited
Full bios of the confirmed speakers, panelists and sponsors are available at the Big Tech & Speech Summit for the updated program speakers and sponsors.
12 Days of Broadband
12 Days of Broadband: State Regulations and Children’s Safety Online
12 year olds (and older) having to age-verify on social media may become more common going forward.
January 3, 2024 – A nationwide push to restrict teenagers’ online actions gained ground in 2023 as several states implemented stringent laws targeting social media use among youth.
In March, Utah ventured into uncharted territory when Republican Gov. Spencer Cox signed two measures, H.B. 311 and S.B. 152, mandating parental consent for all minors – 17 and under – before they can register for platforms like TikTok and Meta’s Instagram. For decades, the default standard of the 1998 Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act has been no restrictions on social media use by kids 13 and over.
- On the Twelfth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
12 Year Olds (and Older) Having to Age-Verify on Social Media
More Than 11 Years in Lawsuits Over Net Neutrality
Nearly 10 Months Without FCC Spectrum Auction Authority
93 Percent Match of Federal Funds for Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Program
The Number 8 As a Representation of Balance, Justice and Fairness
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence
The pair of bills, which do not go into effect until March 2024, require individuals under 18 to gain parental consent to open a social media account, bar minors from accessing social media platforms between the hours of 10:30 p.m. and 6:30 a.m., and grant parents full access to their child’s social media accounts.
In October, Utah announced a lawsuit against TikTok, alleging that the app deploys addictive features to hook young users. The lawsuit raises additional concerns regarding user data and privacy, citing that TikTok’s China-based parent company, ByteDance, is legally binded with the Chinese Communist Party.
Arkansas, Montana may be following Utah
Soon after, Arkansas took a similar step as Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed Act 689, named the Social Media Safety Act, in April 2023. The newly approved act, aiming to mandate age verification and parental consent for social media users under 18, was set to come into effect on September 1.
However, on that very day, U.S. District Judge Timothy Brooks granted a preliminary injunction following a petition from the tech trade industry group, NetChoice Litigation Center. Their contention was that the new law infringed upon the First Amendment’s freedom of expression guarantee.
In May, Montana Gov. Greg Ganforte signed legislation banning TikTok on all devices statewide, threatening fines up to $10,000 per violation for app providers like Google and Apple. Before the law took effect on January 1, Federal Judge Donald Molloy stopped the TikTok ban in late November, stating that the law exceeds state authority and violates the constitutional rights of users.
Shortly after, TikTok filed a lawsuit against Montana. Judge Molloy found merit to numerous arguments raised by TikTok, including that TikTok has a number of safeguards in place surrounding user data.
Is Age verification a First Amendment issue?
Consumer groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union, have raised issues with the fact that many of these bills extend beyond merely mandating age verification solely for minors; they now necessitate age verification through proof of legal documents for anyone seeking to utilize social media within the states.
The issue was much discussed at a Broadband Breakfast Live Online session in November 2023, where child safety advocate Donna Rice Hughes and Tony Allen, executive director of Age Check Certification Scheme, agreed that age verification systems were much more robust than from a generation ago, when the Supreme Court struck down one such scheme. They disagreed with civil liberties groups including the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
On TikTok, 13 states joined in enacting bans over the use of the Chinese-owned platform being installed on government-issued devices. That brings to 34 the total number of states that have banned TikTok on government devices due to national security concerns. Additionally, more than 40 public universities have barred TikTok from their on-campus Wi-Fi and university-owned computers in response to these state-level bans.
See “The Twelve Days of Broadband” on Broadband Breakfast
- On the First Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Second Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Third Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Fourth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Fifth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Sixth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Seventh Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence
- On the Eighth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
The Number 8 As a Representation of Balance, Justice and Fairness
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Ninth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
93 Percent Match of Federal Funds for Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Program
The Number 8 As a Representation of Balance, Justice and Fairness
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Tenth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
Nearly 10 Months Without FCC Spectrum Auction Authority
93 Percent Match of Federal Funds for Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Program
The Number 8 As a Representation of Balance, Justice and Fairness
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence - On the Eleventh Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
More Than 11 Years in Lawsuits Over Net Neutrality
Nearly 10 Months Without FCC Spectrum Auction Authority
93 Percent Match of Federal Funds for Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Program
The Number 8 As a Representation of Balance, Justice and Fairness
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence
- On the Twelfth Day of Broadband, my true love sent to me:
12 Year Olds (and Older) Having to Age-Verify on Social Media
More Than 11 Years in Lawsuits Over Net Neutrality
Nearly 10 Months Without FCC Spectrum Auction Authority
93 Percent Match of Federal Funds for Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Program
The Number 8 As a Representation of Balance, Justice and Fairness
7 Layers to the Open Systems Interconnection Model and Open Access Networks
One-hundred-and 66 Billion Dollars of American Semiconductor Investment
56 States and Territorial Broadband Offices Implementing BEAD
4.8 Million Challenges to Broadband Coverage Data
$3.6 Billion Funds Remaining in the Affordable Connectivity Program
24 Reverse-Preemption Pole Attachment States (2023 edition)
And One Artificial General Intelligence
Social Media
Diverse Groups File Amicus Briefs Against Florida and Texas Social Media Laws
The Supreme Court will decide whether the social media laws violate the First Amendment.
WASHINGTON, December 8, 2023 – Industry, public interest, and conservative groups filed briefs with the Supreme Court this week arguing against Texas and Florida social media laws.
Drafted to combat what state legislators saw as the unfair treatment of right-wing content online, the 2021 laws would allow residents of those states to sue social media companies for suspending their accounts. Both have been blocked from going into effect after legal challenges from tech industry trade groups. The cases were initially separate, but the Supreme Court agreed in October to hear them together because they raise similar issues.
Industry groups argue the laws violate the First Amendment by forcing platforms to host speech they normally would not. The White House agrees – Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar asked the Court in August to take up the issue and strike down Texas’s law.
Consumer protection group Public Knowledge filed an amicus brief on Thursday in support of the tech trade groups, arguing the laws are unconstitutional and “driven by political animus.”
Center-right think tank TechFreedom filed a similar brief on Wednesday.
“Only the state can ‘censor’ speech,” Corbin Barthold, the group’s director of appellate litigation, said in a statement. “And these states are doing so by trying to co-opt websites’ right to editorial control over the speech they disseminate.
Both groups also pushed against the states’ move to treat social media platforms as ‘common carrier’ services, a part of both laws. The legal designation, typically applied to services like railroads or voice telephone calls, requires a carrier to serve the public at just rates without unreasonable discrimination.
The states’ move to designate social media platforms as common carriers would make it more difficult for them to refuse their service to users. But the designation, the groups argued, does not map cleanly onto the service social media provides, as the platforms make editorial decisions about content they transmit – through moderation and recommendation – in a way companies like voice providers do not.
In all, at least 40 similar briefs have been filed arguing against the laws, according to the Computer and Communications Industry Association, one of the parties in the case.
A set of 15 states with Republican-led legislatures and former president Donald Trump, who had multiple social media accounts suspended after the January 2021 attack on the Capitol, have filed amicus briefs in support of Texas and Florida. The Court is expected to hear oral arguments in the case sometime in 2024.
Free Speech
Improved Age Verification Allows States to Consider Restricting Social Media
Constitutional issues leading courts to strike down age verification law are still present, said EFF.
WASHINGTON, November 20, 2023 — A Utah law requiring age verification for social media accounts is likely to face First Amendment lawsuits, experts warned during an online panel Wednesday hosted by Broadband Breakfast.
The law, set to take effect in March 2024, mandates that all social media users in Utah verify their age and imposes additional restrictions on minors’ accounts.
The Utah law raises the same constitutional issues that have led courts to strike down similar laws requiring age verification, said Aaron Mackey, free speech and transparency litigation director at the non-profit Electronic Frontier Foundation.
“What you have done is you have substantially burdened everyone’s First Amendment right to access information online that includes both adults and minors,” Mackey said. “You make no difference between the autonomy and First Amendment rights of older teens and young adults” versus young children, he said.
But Donna Rice Hughes, CEO of Enough is Enough, contended that age verification technology has successfully restricted minors’ access to pornography and could be applied to social media as well.
“Utah was one of the first states [to] have age verification technology in place to keep minor children under the age of 18 off of porn sites and it’s working,” she said.
Tony Allen, executive director of Age Check Certification Scheme, agreed that age verification systems had progressed considerably from a generation ago, when the Supreme Court in 2002’s Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union, struck down the 1998 Child Online Protection Act. The law had been designed to shield minors from indecent material, but the court ruled that age-verification methods often failed at that task.
Andrew Zack, policy manager at the Family Online Safety Institute, said that his organization he welcomed interest in youth safety policies from Utah.
But Zack said, “We still have some concerns about the potential unintended consequences that come with this law,” worrying particularly about potential unintended consequences for teen privacy and expression rights.
Taylor Barkley, director of technology and innovation at the Center for Growth and Opportunity, highlighted the importance of understanding the specific problems the law aims to address. “Policy Solutions have trade-offs.” urging that solutions be tailored to the problems identified.
Panelists generally agreed that comprehensive data privacy legislation could help address social media concerns without facing the same First Amendment hurdles.
Our Broadband Breakfast Live Online events take place on Wednesday at 12 Noon ET. Watch the event on Broadband Breakfast, or REGISTER HERE to join the conversation.
Wednesday, November 15, 2023 – Social Media for Kids in Utah
In March 2023, Utah became the first state to adopt laws regulating kids’ access to social media. This legislative stride was rapidly followed by several states, including Arkansas, Illinois, Louisiana, and Mississippi, with numerous others contemplating similar measures. For nearly two decades, social media platforms enjoyed unbridled growth and influence. The landscape is now changing as lawmakers become more active in shaping the future of digital communication. This transformation calls for a nuanced evaluation of the current state of social media in the United States, particularly in light of Utah’s pioneering role. Is age verification the right way to go? What are the broader implications of this regulatory trend for the future of digital communication and online privacy across the country?
Panelists
- Andrew Zack, Policy Manager, Family Online Safety Institute
- Donna Rice Hughes, President and CEO of Enough Is Enough
- Taylor Barkley, Director of Technology and Innovation, Center for Growth and Opportunity
- Tony Allen, Executive Director, Age Check Certification Scheme
- Aaron Mackey, Free Speech and Transparency Litigation Director, Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Drew Clark (moderator), Editor and Publisher, Broadband Breakfast
Panelist resources
- Utah Protecting Minors Online, State of Utah web site
- Opinion: Does Utah’s social media law respect teens’ rights?, Stephen Balkam, Deseret News
- Twitter thread by Taylor Barkley
- Good Digital Parenting Resources, Family Online Safety Institute
- Coming to Terms with Age Assurance, Family Online Safety Institute
- Making Sense of Age Assurance: Enabling Safer Online Experiences, Family Online Safety Institute
- Social Media and Minors, Center for Growth and Opportunity
- Clicks and Codes: Social Media Awareness Legislation in the States, Center for Growth and Opportunity
- What Should Policymakers Do about Social Media and Minors?, Center for Growth and Opportunity
- Internet Safety 101– Enough Is Enough’s designated website to educate, equip and empower parents and caregivers
Internet Safety 101 Downloadable Parent Quick Guides and Resources, Enough is Enough
- Rein In Big Tech, 30 second shararable clip from Enough is Enough
-
Rein in Big Tech for the sake of our children, Donna Rice Hughes, Washington Times
-
Treat Big Tech like Big Tobacco to protect our kids, Donna Rice Hughes, Fox News
- To Address Online Harms, We Must Consider Privacy First, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Andrew Zack is the Policy Manager for the Family Online Safety Institute, leading policy and research work relating to online safety issues, laws, and regulations. He works with federal and state legislatures, relevant federal agencies, and industry leaders to develop and advance policies that promote safe and positive online experience for families. Andrew joined FOSI after five years in Senator Ed Markey’s office, where he worked primarily on education, child welfare, and disability policies. Andrew studied Government and Psychology at the College of William and Mary.
Donna Rice Hughes, President and CEO of Enough Is Enough is an internationally known Internet safety expert, author, speaker and producer. Her vision, expertise and advocacy helped to birth the Internet safety movement in America at the advent of the digital age. Since 1994, she has been a pioneering leader on the frontlines of U.S. efforts to make the internet safer for children and families by implementing a three-pronged strategy of the public, the technology industry and legal community sharing the responsibility to protect children online.
Taylor Barkley is the Director of Technology and Innovation at the Center for Growth and Opportunity where he manages the research agenda, strategy, and represents the technology and innovation portfolio. His primary research and expertise are at the intersection of culture, technology, and innovation. Prior roles in tech policy have been at Stand Together, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, and the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.
Tony Allen a Chartered Trading Standards Practitioner and acknowledged specialist in age restricted sales law and practice. He is the Chair of the UK Government’s Expert Panel on Age Restrictions and Executive Director of a UKAS accredited conformity assessment body specialising in age and identity assurance testing and certification. He is the Technical Editor of the current international standard for Age Assurance Systems.
Aaron Mackey is EFF’s Free Speech and Transparency Litigation Director. He helps lead cases advancing free speech, anonymity, and privacy online while also working to increase public access to government records. Before joining EFF in 2015, Aaron was in Washington, D.C. where he worked on speech, privacy, and freedom of information issues at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Institute for Public Representation at Georgetown Law
Breakfast Media LLC CEO Drew Clark has led the Broadband Breakfast community since 2008. An early proponent of better broadband, better lives, he initially founded the Broadband Census crowdsourcing campaign for broadband data. As Editor and Publisher, Clark presides over the leading media company advocating for higher-capacity internet everywhere through topical, timely and intelligent coverage. Clark also served as head of the Partnership for a Connected Illinois, a state broadband initiative.
As with all Broadband Breakfast Live Online events, the FREE webcasts will take place at 12 Noon ET on Wednesday.
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