Legal Question in Technology Law in Florida

If I make web sites for adult sites like escorts and massage I don't own site I just make it will I be immune to fosta shosta act?


Asked on 3/22/20, 6:04 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Philip Duvalsaint Philip A. Duvalsaint, PLLC

The FOSTA-SESTA, a law intended to curb sex trafficking. It has already impacted sites like Reddit, Craigslist, and Google. In 2018 President Trump signed into law a set of controversial bills intended to make it easier to cut down on illegal sex trafficking online. Both bills — the House bill known as FOSTA, the Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act, and the Senate bill, SESTA, the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act — have been hailed by advocates as a victory for sex trafficking victims.

But the bills also poke a huge hole in a famous and longstanding “safe harbor” rule of the internet: Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act. Usually shorthanded as “Section 230” and generally seen as one of the most important pieces of internet legislation ever created, it holds that “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.” In other words, Section 230 has allowed the internet to thrive on user-generated content without holding platforms and ISPs responsible for whatever those users might create.

But FOSTA-SESTA creates an exception to Section 230 that means website publishers would be responsible if third parties are found to be posting ads for prostitution — including consensual sex work — on their platforms. The goal of this is supposed to be that policing online prostitution rings gets easier. What FOSTA-SESTA has actually done, however, is create confusion and immediate repercussions among a range of internet sites as they grapple with the ruling’s sweeping language.

The bottom line is that as with all legislation, there is plenty of liability, virtually no safe harbor, and as a result, you must be careful in this area.

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Answered on 3/23/20, 6:00 am


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