If they sunset Section 230, they should also sunset the entire DMCA.<p>That law was a compromise between giving copyright holders all sorts of new powers (DRM, takedown notices, etc), and allowing tech companies to create monopoly platforms (via Section 230) by making it legal(<i>) for them to centralize speech (and therefore censorship) on their platforms.<p>Without the DMCA, we wouldn’t have sites like YouTube or Facebook, and I argue that’d be a good thing. Instead, people would need to self-host their videos, etc. The price of that is approaching zero, but software hasn’t made it easy enough to go those routes (and economic incentives prevent companies from investing in such things).<p>Anyway, the DMCA without Section 230 will have the effect of further centralizing control over online speech. It won’t end well.<p>(</i>) it was technically legal before the DMCA, but only if you were willing to take on unbounded legal liability.