KEY POINTS
  • Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai plans to move forward with rulemaking to "clarify" the scope of tech's legal liability shield, Section 230, he said in a statement Thursday.
  • The decision follows an executive order issued by President Donald Trump in May directing the FCC to set new rules on Section 230's protections.
  • It's still unclear how the FCC would seek to "clarify" Section 230, but if tech platforms' protection under the law is limited, it could force them to rethink their business models entirely.
Chairman Ajit Pai, Chanirman of the Federal Communications Commission in Washington.

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said Thursday he plans to move forward with rulemaking to "clarify" the scope of Section 230, an important legal shield for tech companies such as Facebook, Google and Twitter.

Section 230 protects tech platforms from being held liable for their users' posts. It also allows them to moderate content in good faith without repercussions. The law was passed in the early days of the internet in the 1990s as part of the Communications Decency Act, but lawmakers across the political spectrum have since called for it to be revised as the tech companies have grown to massive scale and influence.