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Scott, Tim | Senator

Scott, Tillis, and Colleagues Send Letter Seeking Answers on Changed PayPal Policy to Financially Punish Customers Over ‘Misinformation’

South Carolina

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WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Tim Scott (R-S.C.) joined  Senator Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and five of their Senate Republican  colleagues in penning a letter to PayPal seeking answers over PayPal’s  recent announcement of a policy intended to financially punish its own  customers for expressing views which PayPal arbitrarily classifies as  “misinformation.” Though PayPal ultimately rescinded the policy before  it could go into effect, the senators “remain concerned about the  processes and values in place at PayPal that allowed a policy such as  this to move forward in the first place.”

The senators wrote, “As widely reported, PayPal  issued an update to the terms and conditions of its AUP, which is  scheduled to take effect on November 3, 2022. This update included  language that would have allowed PayPal to fine any one of its 429  million users up to $2,500 per offense for  spreading ‘misinformation.’ Disturbingly, the drafting of the policy  gave PayPal ‘sole discretion’ regarding what constitutes  ‘misinformation.’ In effect, PayPal sought the ability to define, then  punish its users’ public thoughts.”

The senators continued, “Additionally, PayPal  attempted to downplay the dramatic shift in policy this provision  envisioned by arguing that its user agreement ‘has long-stated that  PayPal can take funds of up to $2,500 or local equivalent from an  account for each violation of the Acceptable Use Policy.’ Yet a review  of PayPal’s current Prohibited Activities list shows the vast majority  of violations arise from breaches of public law or transactions for  specific disfavored items or business practices. The addition of a vague  prohibition on spreading ‘misinformation’ not only would have  concerningly expanded the scope of punishable actions, but also would  have decreased clarity and increased subjectivity within the Prohibited  Activities list. PayPal users deserve clear rules of the road for using  the platform, not punishments for open-ended, subjective offenses.”

“Greater encroachment by large technology and financial companies  into public speech will only exacerbate Americans’ increasing mistrust  of such institutions. Moreover, countless major news events over the  past several years have taught us that public information continually  evolves, often causing individuals, groups, and organizations to  reassess what once appeared to be settled fact. Given this reality,  policies that empower companies to punish individuals’ beliefs by acting  as arbiters of fact in our ever-changing news and public debate  environment represent poor business decisions. Instead, large technology  and financial institutions should focus on serving the needs of their  customers without bias,” the senators concluded.

Senators Scott and Tillis were joined by U.S. Senators Pat Toomey  (R-Pa.), Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Kevin Cramer  (R-N.D.) and Steve Daines (R-Mont.).

Read the full letter here.

Background

Sen. Scott has been leading the  fight against discrimination in financial services. Last week, he sent a  letter to PayPal President and CEO Dan Schulman expressing his  concerns regarding reported updates to the company’s Acceptable Use  Policy. The letter cautioned the firm against attempting to usurp the  democratic process by using its market power as a financial institution  to pick political winners and losers.

Read Senator Scott’s letter here.

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Original source can be found here.

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