INTERNET GOVERNANCE AND MORAL ENTREPRENEURS

Autores/as

  • Zachary McDowell University of Illinois at Chicago, United States of America
  • Katrin Tiidenberg Tallinn University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2023i0.13462

Palabras clave:

deplatforming, platform politics, internet governance, media history, FOSTA/SESTA

Resumen

A growing body of academic work on internet governance focuses on the “deplatforming of sex,” or the removal and suppression of sexual expression from the internet. Often, this is linked to the 2018 passing of FOSTA/SESTA – much-criticized twin bills that make internet intermediaries liable for content that promotes or facilitates prostitution or sex trafficking. We suggest analyzing both internet governance and the deplatforming of sex in conjunction with long-term agendas of conservative lobbying groups. Specifically, we combine media historiography, policy analysis, and thematic and discourse analysis of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation’s (NCOSE, formerly Morality in Media) press releases and media texts to show how conservative moral entrepreneurs weaponize ideas of morality, obscenity, and harm in internet governance. We illustrate how NCOSE has, directly and indirectly, interfered in internet governance, first by lobbying for rigorous enforcement of obscenity laws and then for creating internet-specific obscenity laws (which we argue CDA, COPA, and FOSTA/SESTA all were for NCOSE). We show how NCOSE adjusted their rhetoric to first link pornography to addiction and pedophilia and later to trafficking and exploitation; how they took advantage of the #metoo momentum; mastered legal language, and incorporated an explicit anti-internet stance.

Descargas

Publicado

2023-12-31

Cómo citar

McDowell, . Z. ., & Tiidenberg, K. (2023). INTERNET GOVERNANCE AND MORAL ENTREPRENEURS. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research. https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2023i0.13462

Número

Sección

Papers M