Users Reject PayPal’s Attempt to Limit Speech. They Should.

Users Reject PayPal’s Attempt to Limit Speech. They Should.
A PayPal sign at the LeWeb expo in Paris on Dec. 5, 2012. (Eric Piermont/AFP/Getty Images)
J.G. Collins
10/9/2022
Updated:
10/12/2022
0:00
Commentary
An update to the Acceptable Use Policy (AUP) of PayPal, the multinational payments platform, was interpreted to say the company will withhold up to $2,500 of account holders’ funds as “liquidated damages” if  users “provide false, inaccurate, or misleading information.”  The new policy was first highlighted by the Daily Wire on Oct. 7.

Even former PayPal president David Marcus took issue with the policy:

Tech auteur Elon Musk, who had been an early developer of the PayPal payment platform, reportedly tweeted he “Agreed” with Marcus.

Several hundred users on Twitter said they were dropping their accounts.

After the backlash, National Review reported last evening that PayPal had written to its editors saying:
“An AUP notice recently went out in error that included incorrect information. PayPal is not fining people for misinformation and this language was never intended to be inserted in our policy. Our teams are working to correct our policy pages. We’re sorry for the confusion this has caused
However, as of Sunday morning, the terms remain on PayPal’s website and the @PayPal Twitter account had not addressed the issue. By the wee hours of Sunday morning, #BankruptPayPal was trending on the social media site. And users were understandably skeptical of the walk-back.

The policies drawing public ire, unchanged as of Sunday afternoon at 1:00PM EDT, include the following:

In connection with your use of our websites, your PayPal account, the PayPal services, or in the course of your interactions with PayPal, other PayPal customers, or third parties, you must not...
  • Violate any law, statute, ordinance, or regulation (for example, those governing financial services, consumer protections, unfair competition, anti-discrimination or false advertising);
  • Act in a manner that is defamatory, trade libelous, threatening or harassing;
  • Provide false, inaccurate or misleading information.
Screen grab of the relevant portion of the PayPal User Agreement as of 10/09/2022 2:00PM EDT
Screen grab of the relevant portion of the PayPal User Agreement as of 10/09/2022 2:00PM EDT
Restricted Activities, Holds, and Liquidated Damages

If you are a seller and receive funds for transactions that violate the Acceptable Use Policy, then in addition to being subject to the above actions you will be liable to PayPal for the amount of PayPal’s damages caused by your violation of the Acceptable Use Policy. You acknowledge and agree that $2,500.00 U.S. dollars per violation of the Acceptable Use Policy is presently a reasonable minimum estimate of PayPal’s actual damages...

Screen grab of relevant section of PayPal User Agreement as of 10/09/2022 2:00PM EDT
Screen grab of relevant section of PayPal User Agreement as of 10/09/2022 2:00PM EDT

PayPal’s Selective Servicing

PayPal’s actions would reasonably lead one to believe it aligns itself with what are called “progressive” policies. Consider these examples:
  • Sellers of ammunition, firearms, and component parts of firearms are not permitted to use the site to transact business.
  • Last month, PayPal froze the account of “UsForThem,” a British parents group that campaigned to keep schools open during the pandemic. Another British group, “Free Speech Union,” was also shut down. The Times of London reported that PayPal had been accused of “‘blatant’ political discrimination.”
  • In a particularly interesting shut-down, a website called “The Daily Sceptic“ was shut down with no real reason stated, aside from a nebulous assertion that ”PayPal’s policy is not to allow our services to be used for activities that promote hate, violence or racial intolerance,“ an allegation the publication’s editor-in-chief denies. But he questioned whether the ban might be related to a number of controversial positions the site has taken, including challenging the media’s largely pro-Ukraine narrative on the Russia-Ukraine War and being critical of ”trans rights.”
PayPal also appears to be an obsequious subordinate to the sometimes mercurial policies of hyper-local authorities, like county and city authorities. Note that PayPal tells its users, “You must not ... violate any ordinance, or regulation ... (for example ... anti-discrimination.)"[Emphasis is mine.]
That should be troubling, as it will tend to legitimize the mores that many hyper-local lawmakers have adopted without much notice and remain, for most, unsettled as standard civil behavior. Some of these restrict free speech or even impose required speech or actions by individuals or businesses.
Here in New York City, for example, a regulation implementing a local anti-discrimination ordinance “requires employers and covered entities to use the name, pronouns, and title (e.g., Ms./Mrs./Mx.) with which a person self-identifies, regardless of the person’s sex assigned at birth, anatomy, gender, medical history, appearance, or the sex indicated on the person’s identification.”
Fines up to $125,000 can be imposed for violations, and they can be doubled if the violation is “willful, wanton, or malicious.” Notwithstanding that the regulation may be unconstitutional on its face, it is on the books, so PayPal might suspend an account for failing to use the preferred pronoun of a transgender celebrity. Imagine how that would work for some of the orthodox Jewish or Muslim newspapers or websites.

Conclusion

PayPal is a lifeline for tens of thousands of small business owners, as well as millions of people with limited access to credit. Seemingly arbitrary suspension of accounts—sometimes for as much as six months—is a significant and substantial interference with Congress’s prerogative to regulate commerce. As a private company, that’s likely legal, but it should not stand any more than a private company denying, say, a bus or flight service to someone based on their political views.

When the new Congress convenes in January, the House Financial Services Committee and the Senate Banking Committee need to propose and pass regulations that would treat financial services websites the same as public utilities or common carriers. Those people selling items that are illegal, or conspiring to engage in criminal activity, can be pursued by criminal investigators (who may, in fact, be aided by the digital roadmap they provide when using sites like PayPal).

But it’s inappropriate—indeed, dangerous—for private corporations to impose their standards based on the views of users, even when those views are patently offensive; even if they are hateful. We can hate the vile speech of racists, anti-Semites, Nazis, Klansmen, and the rest of the putrid panoply of congenital haters, left and right, religious and secular, Democrat, Republican, and unaligned. They seem everywhere of late. But their speech is protected unless and until it rises to become what the courts have defined as a “clear and present danger.
Part of the price of living in a free society is having to endure the vile, odious speech of others whose hateful views we find contemptible. But, in the words of Justice Louis Brandeis, “to avert ... evil ... the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.”

And PayPal should not be the arbiter of what can be permitted.


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J.G. Collins is managing director of the Stuyvesant Square Consultancy, a strategic advisory, market survey, and consulting firm in New York. His writings on economics, trade, politics, and public policy have appeared in Forbes, the New York Post, Crain’s New York Business, The Hill, The American Conservative, and other publications.
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