Governing Babel: The Debate over Social Media Platforms and Free Speech--and What Comes Next
Why social media platforms have a responsibility to look after their platforms, how they can achieve the transparency needed, and what they should do when harms arise.

The large, corporate global platforms networking the world’s publics now host most of the world’s information and communication. Much has been written about social media platforms, and many have argued for platform accountability, responsibility, and transparency. But relatively few works have tried to place platform dynamics and challenges in the context of history, especially with an eye toward sensibly regulating these communications technologies.

In Governing Babel, John Wihbey articulates a point of view in the ongoing, high-stakes debate over social media platforms and free speech about how these companies ought to manage their tremendous power.

Wihbey takes readers on a journey into the high-pressure and controversial world of social media content moderation, looking at issues through relevant cultural, legal, historical, and global lenses. The book addresses a vast challenge—how to create new rules to deal with the ills of our communications and media systems—but the central argument it develops is relatively simple. The idea is that those who create and manage systems for communications hosting user-generated content have both a responsibility to look after their platforms and have a duty to respond to problems. They must, in effect, adopt a central response principle that allows their platforms to take reasonable action when potential harms present themselves. And finally, they should be judged, and subject to sanction, according to the good faith and persistence of their efforts.
1146800109
Governing Babel: The Debate over Social Media Platforms and Free Speech--and What Comes Next
Why social media platforms have a responsibility to look after their platforms, how they can achieve the transparency needed, and what they should do when harms arise.

The large, corporate global platforms networking the world’s publics now host most of the world’s information and communication. Much has been written about social media platforms, and many have argued for platform accountability, responsibility, and transparency. But relatively few works have tried to place platform dynamics and challenges in the context of history, especially with an eye toward sensibly regulating these communications technologies.

In Governing Babel, John Wihbey articulates a point of view in the ongoing, high-stakes debate over social media platforms and free speech about how these companies ought to manage their tremendous power.

Wihbey takes readers on a journey into the high-pressure and controversial world of social media content moderation, looking at issues through relevant cultural, legal, historical, and global lenses. The book addresses a vast challenge—how to create new rules to deal with the ills of our communications and media systems—but the central argument it develops is relatively simple. The idea is that those who create and manage systems for communications hosting user-generated content have both a responsibility to look after their platforms and have a duty to respond to problems. They must, in effect, adopt a central response principle that allows their platforms to take reasonable action when potential harms present themselves. And finally, they should be judged, and subject to sanction, according to the good faith and persistence of their efforts.
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Governing Babel: The Debate over Social Media Platforms and Free Speech--and What Comes Next

Governing Babel: The Debate over Social Media Platforms and Free Speech--and What Comes Next

by John P. Wihbey
Governing Babel: The Debate over Social Media Platforms and Free Speech--and What Comes Next

Governing Babel: The Debate over Social Media Platforms and Free Speech--and What Comes Next

by John P. Wihbey

eBook

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Overview

Why social media platforms have a responsibility to look after their platforms, how they can achieve the transparency needed, and what they should do when harms arise.

The large, corporate global platforms networking the world’s publics now host most of the world’s information and communication. Much has been written about social media platforms, and many have argued for platform accountability, responsibility, and transparency. But relatively few works have tried to place platform dynamics and challenges in the context of history, especially with an eye toward sensibly regulating these communications technologies.

In Governing Babel, John Wihbey articulates a point of view in the ongoing, high-stakes debate over social media platforms and free speech about how these companies ought to manage their tremendous power.

Wihbey takes readers on a journey into the high-pressure and controversial world of social media content moderation, looking at issues through relevant cultural, legal, historical, and global lenses. The book addresses a vast challenge—how to create new rules to deal with the ills of our communications and media systems—but the central argument it develops is relatively simple. The idea is that those who create and manage systems for communications hosting user-generated content have both a responsibility to look after their platforms and have a duty to respond to problems. They must, in effect, adopt a central response principle that allows their platforms to take reasonable action when potential harms present themselves. And finally, they should be judged, and subject to sanction, according to the good faith and persistence of their efforts.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262384339
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 10/07/2025
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 254

About the Author

John P. Wihbey is Associate Professor of Media Innovation at Northeastern University, where he cofounded the Institute for Information, Internet & Democracy and directs the AI-Media Strategies Lab. He is the author of The Social Fact (MIT Press) and has served as a research consultant to social media companies, foundations, and government.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“John Wihbey has written a tour de force that tackles the Babel of confusion and fragmentation fostered by modern communications. Separating myth from fact, and seasoning it with lively examples, Wihbey has produced a book that is both readable and informative.”
—Tom Wheeler, former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC); author of Techlash

“This is a book we desperately need right now. With clarity, wisdom, intellectual sophistication, and the discipline to avoid short-term thinking, John Wihbey takes us on an authoritative tour of information and speech in the social media era, the most pressing of topics, and shows us the form that the next and better phase might take.”
Nicholas Lemann, author of Higher Admissions; Dean Emeritus and Joseph Pulitzer II and Edith Pulitzer Moore Professor of Journalism, Columbia University

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