EARN IT Act Abuses Privacy in the Guise of Protecting Kids
It probably won't save any children, but it might mean the end of encrypted messaging.

Governments have never liked it when their subjects keep secrets from them and they really don't like encryption technology, which makes it easier for people to conceal their messages from prying eyes. But the public hasn't been buying the eavesdropping that politicians are selling. So, the powers-that-be moved on to claiming that they're concerned about protecting the children and just incidentally restricting the use of techniques for protecting privacy. The EARN IT Act is the latest effort to invade our communications, and its advocates occasionally let the mask slip.
The Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies (EARN IT) Act of 2022 is ostensibly about protecting kids from child porn. "The bill amends Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to remove blanket immunity from Federal civil, State criminal, and State civil child sexual abuse material laws entirely," asserted Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) in a press release when he introduced the bill last week.
But Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown has covered the EARN IT Act and its predecessors through the various incarnations of the legislation, and points out that the bill is based on some false claims:
The main thrust of the EARN IT Act is to add another exception to Section 230 (the law that shields digital entities from some liability for user and customer communications) related to child pornography. What supporters of the law like to obscure is that digital entities are not shielded from federal prosecution if they break child porn laws. The EARN IT Act isn't needed to criminally punish them for this.
So, if the law already holds accountable people who post child pornography, what's going on here? Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), a co-sponsor of the bill, showed his hand when asked by The Washington Post about the bill making encrypted services evidence of wrongdoing. "He said lawmakers wouldn't offer a blanket exemption to using encryption as evidence, arguing companies might use it as a 'get-out-of-jail-free card,'" reporter Cat Zakrzewski noted.
As a result, the Electronic Frontier Foundation warns that "if enacted, EARN IT will put massive legal pressure on internet companies both large and small to stop using encryption and instead scan all user messages, photos, and files."
This isn't an isolated example, either. The British government is waging an extended campaign against encryption in the name of saving children from exploitation. It even launched an advertising campaign against the use of privacy-protecting technology.
"We have engaged M&C Saatchi to bring together the many organisations who share our concerns about the impact end-to-end encryption would have on our ability to keep children safe," the UK Home Office told Rolling Stone last month.
The motivating factor here isn't an epidemic of kiddie porn. It's more of an organized effort among multiple governments to turn the public against anything that shields communications from prying eyes.
"We, the undersigned, support strong encryption, which plays a crucial role in protecting personal data, privacy, intellectual property, trade secrets and cyber security," the governments of Australia, Canada, India, Japan, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States insisted in a joint October 2020 statement. "Particular implementations of encryption technology, however, pose significant challenges to public safety, including to highly vulnerable members of our societies like sexually exploited children. We urge industry to address our serious concerns where encryption is applied in a way that wholly precludes any legal access to content."
So, multiple governments are coordinating efforts to suppress encryption by linking it to child abuse, and the EARN IT Act is an American manifestation of that scheme. But even officials of some of those governments find this all a bit preposterous, including Britain's Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), which acts as a data watchdog.
"The discussion on end-to-end encryption use is too unbalanced to make a wise and informed choice. There is too much focus on the costs without also weighing up the significant benefits," Stephen Bonner, ICO's Executive Director for Innovation and Technology, objected in January. "E2EE [end-to-end encryption] serves an important role both in safeguarding our privacy and online safety. It strengthens children's online safety by not allowing criminals and abusers to send them harmful content or access their pictures or location."
Some American lawmakers also raise worries about the bill's impact.
"I've got some concerns with the encryption component of the bill," Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) objected during a February 10 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing considering the EARN IT Act. "I'm a little concerned that the current language inadvertently mandates interactive computer services to do for the government what the government itself is prohibited from doing, which is engaging in sort of open-ended policing, the accessing and then reporting of private and protected data without the protections of the law."
He also pointed out that compliance with the proposed law's liability standards would be far easier for large, established services than for smaller operations.
"I remain concerned about some of the provisions around encryption and how it may impact domestic violence victims in this country, human rights advocates and journalists overseas," agreed Sen. Christopher Coons (D-Del.).
Nevertheless, the committee members approved the bill without any changes.
"The newest version of the bill…makes things worse," warns the Center for Democracy and Technology in a letter objecting to the measure before Congress. "By dramatically expanding the risk of lawsuits intermediaries will face over user-generated content and their use of end-to-end encryption, the bill will cause intermediaries to over-remove even lawful content and disincentivize them from offering encrypted services, to the detriment of all internet users."
It's a fair bet that disincentivizing the use of encryption is exactly what is intended by the sponsors of this and related measures in the United States and abroad. For all of the talk of saving children from abuse, the true hope of lawmakers and government officials is to abuse our privacy by stripping us of the ability to keep secrets from the state.
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Hey Reason, where is the story on the latest Durham findings???
Doesn't fit the DNC narrative so they have no interest in it.
Truly embarrassing.
I hear there might be something happening in Canada that could be of interest to a libertarian readership.
Maybe.
You can read all about it, just not here.
https://simulationcommander.substack.com/p/tyrants-gonna-tyrant?r=uh70u
SleepyJoe wants everyone to have electric cars, but he’s going to “work like the devil “ to reduce gas prices. Is that a reasonable stance after stopping pipeline construction?
Is that a reasonable stance after stopping pipeline construction?
You're assuming "work like the devil" means "work really hard" and not "work deceptively and against humanity's better virtues".
Joementia wants everyone to have electric cars but places a moratorium on the extraction of rare earth elements.
"The bill amends Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to remove blanket immunity from Federal civil, State criminal, and State civil child sexual abuse material laws entirely,"
This is just the best Reason-style libertarian take on the issue. The section provides Good Samaritan Protection For The Blocking And Screening Of Offensive Material. I don't see how not providing protection for not blocking and screening offensive material should be off the plate, or even really anti-libertarian. Arguably the new bill is just redundant with S230. But then S230 is, or should be, also redundant and in need of repeal. It's not like anybody were getting legislative shielding for distributing child porn before 1997. Wait, I take that back, there were people getting shielding for child porn prior to 1997, they were LEOs and Title II carriers/platforms.
Not sorry you agreed to and continue to vociferously defended taking the tip and are now getting the shaft.
In the days of the Telegraph businesses used codes to cut down on their costs and to keep information confidential. The Keys to those codes were required by Law to be given to the Federal Government. What's new?
And the government abused the fuck out of that to spy on people. What's new?
Maybe some officials are well-intentioned but the figurative “medicine is worse than the disease” they are fixing. Officials seem to fear the First Amendment more than actual criminality.
Every official (local, state/commonwealth and federal) swore a supreme loyalty oath - Oath of Office - to uphold the First Amendment and U.S. Constitution. Their own employment contract prohibits censorship of legal First Amendment activity (as defined by the U.S. Supreme Court).
The idea that there's some sort of epidemic of child abuse that only drastic measure can stop is one of the Big Lies those in authority have been telling lately. There's no evidence that there is such an epidemic, or that drastic curtailments of freedom would do anything to stop it if it did exist. But no one thinks people would lie about something so serious, so they keep getting away with it.
The British government is waging an extended campaign against encryption in the name of saving children from exploitation.
Oh thisis RICH. WHOM are they trying to decieve here? There are cities in Britain where hundred, eventhuosands, of young girls are groomed and exloited suxually for huge miney, the key operatives are well known, but even when brought before the magistrates for trial the guilty are let off. Some of these "rings" have been ongiong for years, operating openly in lrger cities. If they REALLY CARED about"the children' they;'d move to put the ringleaderrs away for decades. The FACT they fail utterly to do this proves they are not really interested in reducing this exploytation.
Then we have broad and open "hints' of signficant upper crust government and business kingpins involved in childexloytation, free flights to offshore (internaiotnal waters) island where they seem to think they are exempt from US Fed prosecution for what, were it done in the US, the perps would be sentaway for decades. Some pretty "squeeky clean"topUS government uffishuls have been strongly implicated. Maybe this is a bait and switch matter, these rule changes?
The reality: online technology is not a safe technology to use. Consumers are taking a huge risk using email, social media and other online services.
According to reputable newspapers, America’s most secret agencies don’t trust this technology either. Some agencies apparently use manual typewriters and human delivery couriers instead of online technology even with cutting edge encryption.
Government agencies, mandating back-doors and opposing encryption, makes it far easier for criminals to access our personal information. By weakening online security, these agencies are also placing our children at risk. Today many schools issue inferior computer laptops to our kids (bypassing parents participation) which makes it easier for criminals to monitor inside your home or use tracking technology on your kids.
When you hear "saving children" and "saving grandmas", you can bet the carpet-bagger is at his old tricks, committing a veritable slight of hand: while you not and fixate on the right hand holding the top had, the left is rifling through your wallet. If there was no other reason to distruct the efforts of the state in terms of covid "protection", the fact that Criminal SA Cuomo implored us to accept that kids were evil little germ spreaders whose kiss would be the kiss of death for dear old grandma, in a bill named for his own dear old mamma (who obviously doesn't life with the hoi pall-oi in an ordinary folks nursing home anyway), should have sent alarm bells ringing. The degree to which each and every bum legislator pushing this nonsense was and still is completely indifferent to the massive harm done to the mental health and intellectual development of the nations children in the name of "being socially responsible" only should point out how ridiculous it is for them to pretend now that they have to protect the children from a pornography epidemic. Sex trafficking, maybe. But first and foremost, give them their human dignity back. Give them their voice and their right to walk the streets without covering their faces. Until you do that, you forfeit any claim to being motiviated by concern for them! Each of these hypocrite bums should be put in the square with their careers in the balance and made to defend their hypocracy with respect to ignoring education, bullying parents to vaccinate their HEALTHY children, with basically only the flimsiest data to support their position. And if they cannot so justify their actions as Constitutional AND ethical, then they must be barred from holding public office ever again!
Too local!
I am making a good MONEY (500$ to 700$ / hr. )online on my iPad .Last month my paycheck was nearly 30 k$.This online work is like drawing straight-arrow and earning money.It's a REAL job to open this web site....... MORE DETAIL.
"create a narrative"
Well, they were part of the narrative, so it’s gonna take some time for everyone to figure out the new narrative. Evidently the NYT floated out the “They were really spying on Obama” narrative, but that might even be too retarded for Reason.
It may be kinda key in how certain popular platforms exert undue influence or can do so with impunity as to what news stories get covered and what news stories don't.
Of course, Reason is defending their impunity in the matter and, in this article, arguing that their impunity should be greater/more durable. And not unwittingly either, this was all explained in the debate about NN, but Reason insisted that their favorite (further) abrogation of the 1A superseded the 1A.