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This All-In Podcast episode from Davos features Jason Calacanis and David Sacks interviewing Sarah Rogers, the Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy at the State Department. The conversation centers on the escalating tensions between American free speech values and European censorship regulations. (02:15) Rogers explains how European laws like the UK's Online Safety Act and the EU's Digital Services Act are creating a "censorship tariff" on American companies while prosecuting thousands of British citizens for speech that would be protected in the United States. (11:51)
Key themes: The episode explores the fundamental clash between American First Amendment protections and European regulatory overreach, the role of the "censorship industrial complex," and how AI deepfakes present new challenges to free expression.
Sarah Rogers serves as the Undersecretary for Public Diplomacy at the State Department, overseeing America's relationship with foreign publics rather than governments. She is a former American lawyer who previously worked on First Amendment cases, including representing Charlie Hebdo on free speech issues and winning the landmark Supreme Court case NRA vs. Vullo on viewpoint-based debanking. Rogers manages America's educational, cultural, and sports diplomacy programs including the Fulbright program and upcoming LA Olympics.
Jason Calacanis is a prominent tech entrepreneur, angel investor, and podcast host. He co-hosts the All-In Podcast and has been a vocal advocate for free speech in technology platforms. As an early-stage investor and startup advisor, Calacanis brings a Silicon Valley perspective to discussions about tech regulation and censorship.
David Sacks is a venture capitalist, entrepreneur, and recently appointed public servant in the Trump administration. Former PayPal executive and Yammer founder, Sacks now serves in a government capacity while maintaining his role as co-host of the All-In Podcast. He brings both private sector technology experience and current government insider knowledge to policy discussions.
The UK's Online Safety Act and EU's Digital Services Act impose vague speech restrictions that result in massive fines against American tech platforms. (13:46) Rogers describes how X was fined €140 million under the DSA, while 4chan faces UK litigation despite having no UK-specific content or business operations. These regulations function as de facto tariffs, with European revenue from fining American companies becoming a significant income stream. The vague nature of these laws creates a chilling effect where risk-averse corporations over-censor to avoid regulatory punishment.
Practical Application: Business leaders should audit their international compliance strategies to understand how foreign speech regulations might impact their operations, even when serving primarily domestic markets.
Rather than rushing to create AI-specific regulations, existing laws against defamation, fraud, and child exploitation already cover most harmful deepfake uses. (25:53) Rogers advocates for giving "freedom the benefit of the doubt" when new technologies emerge, noting that historically, societies adapt to technological changes without requiring extensive new censorship apparatus. The key is distinguishing between authentic parody (where viewers know it's fake) and deceptive deepfakes that could mislead reasonable people.
Practical Application: Organizations should focus on implementing detection and transparency measures like watermarking rather than blanket AI content bans when developing content policies.
The Biden administration's coordination with social media platforms to suppress content created an end-run around First Amendment protections. (34:18) This "censorship industrial complex" involved government agencies working with NGOs to flag content for removal, with officials explicitly stating they couldn't act directly due to constitutional constraints. Information later proven true, including lab leak theories and vaccine transmission limitations, was suppressed under the guise of combating "disinformation."
Practical Application: Companies should establish clear policies distinguishing between legitimate regulatory compliance and inappropriate government pressure to censor legal content.
Financial institutions and payment processors can be pressured to cut off services to disfavored speakers, creating an effective censorship mechanism through economic strangulation. (39:58) Rogers won the Supreme Court case NRA vs. Vullo, which established that government regulators cannot use regulatory pressure to force financial institutions to discriminate based on viewpoint. This "reputational risk" framework has been expanded beyond financial solvency to include ESG considerations about serving controversial speakers.
Practical Application: Financial service providers should develop clear, viewpoint-neutral policies for account termination and resist regulatory pressure that targets specific political viewpoints rather than genuine financial risks.
X's Community Notes feature demonstrates how distributed fact-checking can effectively combat misinformation without centralized censorship. (43:44) The system only promotes corrections when users who typically disagree reach consensus, creating accountability through ideological diversity rather than authority. This approach provides transparency by showing both original content and community responses, unlike traditional fact-checking that often removes content entirely or applies labels from biased sources.
Practical Application: Platforms should prioritize transparency and user empowerment over content removal, allowing audiences to see both original material and community responses to make informed decisions.