Seems that 230 may have been a sensible law in 1996. Not clear that its workable in 2014. Google now has responsibility to scrub 3d party content (right to be forgotten cases in Europe), Roommates.com was stripped of its Section 230's shield because it "participated" (in civil rights violations related to discriminatory housing), several sites (like PirateBay) shuttered for facilitating illegal downloads. Perhaps most notably, the US Supreme's just completely shut down Aero (see,
http://mashable.com/2014/06/25/aereo-loses-2/). The Supreme's found Aero complicit, even though a significant amount of the content was not even covered by copyright, or was "public" (like Congress and Senate hearings).
Clearly technology has gotten far ahead of the law. Another thing is equally clear: governments and law enforcement believe the internet is being used to circumvent the law. The cases above, and Redbook teach us that LE will not sit and watch idly at civil and criminal violations online.
One does wonder: if the domain and website were purchased and hosted outside the subpoena/seizure authority of the US (p411 in Canada; TER in Europe, etc), would Redbook still be online?
Have lots of thoughts about Redbook and interested to hear insights as well. If there is scholarly law student among our members, this could make a great law review article there are a TON of juicy and potentially precedent setting issues likely to come out of this.
Or (more likely?) defendants' cop plea, pay fines and walk away promising never to promote adult entertainment services again, else violate their release.
19Trees