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SUPREME COURT TO DECIDE IF STATES CAN CONTROL FATE OF SOCIAL MEDIA


AS A “SPLINTERNET” EMERGES IN THE UNITED STATES, THE HIGH COURT WILL DECIDE IF
THE FIRST AMENDMENT BLOCKS A PAIR OF LAWS THAT TACKLE CONSERVATIVES’ ALLEGATIONS
OF BIG TECH CENSORSHIP

By Cat Zakrzewski
and 
Ann E. Marimow
February 25, 2024 at 7:00 a.m. EST

(Washington Post illustration; Shutterstock)

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To participate in the internet’s leading Star Trek forum, Reddit users must
abide by a simple rule: “Be nice.”

So when a user called one of the franchise’s characters a “soy boy” — a
pejorative term insulting a person’s masculinity — in 2022, the discussion
board’s volunteer moderators kicked him out.



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But the user shot back, filing a lawsuit against Reddit under a landmark Texas
law prohibiting social media companies from removing posts or accounts based on
a viewpoint — an unprecedented regulation subverting how the internet has
operated for decades.

The Supreme Court on Monday will hear oral arguments to determine the
constitutionality of that Texas law along with a related Florida law, which
prohibits platforms from suspending the accounts of political candidates or
media publications.

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The cases will determine whether state governments or tech companies have the
power to set the rules for what posts can appear on popular social networks.

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Republican leaders adopted the laws in response to growing concern among
conservatives that social media giants were censoring their political views.

Tech companies, represented by the trade group NetChoice, argue the laws give
the government too much control over online speech in violation of the First
Amendment and have the potential to usher in a patchwork of different internet
laws rooted in political whims of state leaders.

This “splinternet” is starting to emerge in the United States, as regulations
governing the internet diverge along political and state lines. In the absence
of federal mandates, red states are pushing forward with laws that could make it
harder for companies to remove content from their services, while blue states,
including California and New York, have passed transparency measures encouraging
companies to remove violent and other harmful posts.



The court’s ruling could have sweeping implications for a host of federal and
state efforts to regulate social media companies — on issues ranging from
children’s safety to artificial intelligence. To fight back, the tech industry
increasingly uses the First Amendment as a shield, and legal experts warn an
overly broad ruling in favor of the companies could establish a constitutional
right to bat away regulation.

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Because social networks play a central role in political discourse, the high
court decision will have expansive consequences beyond business, for the future
of American democracy. A decision in the cases is expected by late June, in the
critical months before the U.S. presidential election.

“It’s difficult to think of any other recent First Amendment case in which the
stakes were so high,” said Jameel Jaffer, executive director of the Knight First
Amendment Institute, in a news release.

The tech industry groups, national security officials and researchers say
limiting companies’ abilities to remove content could allow misinformation,
terrorism and other harmful activities to fester online. Florida and Texas
meanwhile warn that a handful of social media companies wield a powerful grip on
modern political discourse, and that regulations are needed to ensure they don’t
discriminate. Former president Donald Trump submitted a brief defending the
Florida law, in a signal of the cases’ implications for the 2024 presidential
election.

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The cases are upending traditional party politics and inspiring odd bedfellows.
The Biden administration, which has largely taken a tough line against Silicon
Valley, filed a brief siding with the companies, arguing that the state laws go
too far and that the First Amendment protects social networks just like
bookstores, editorial pages and theaters.

Meanwhile, a group of liberal law professors, including former Biden tech
adviser Tim Wu, filed a brief siding with the Republican-led states. A ruling
for the tech companies could stifle other efforts to regulate social media
companies, including children’s online safety laws, antitrust mandates and
nascent efforts to rein in artificial intelligence, they wrote.

“The First Amendment does not mandate giving tech companies super-immunity when
they open their digital properties for public use,” wrote the professors, in a
brief jointly submitted by the American Economic Liberties Project, an
anti-monopoly advocacy group.

A SHOWDOWN AT THE SUPREME COURT

The 2021 state laws came amid growing unease from conservatives that companies
like Facebook and Twitter had obtained an iron grip on American political
discourse. Republicans’ long-running accusations that tech companies censored
their political views reached a fever pitch in the fallout of the pandemic and
the 2020 election, as tech companies frequently attached labels to Trump’s false
claims online. Facebook, Google and Twitter put a fine point on their immense
power and took the extraordinary step of suspending the sitting president’s
social media accounts after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

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NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association, a pair of tech
industry trade groups, have been embroiled in litigation over the Florida and
Texas laws for nearly three years. The companies and states asked the Supreme
Court to weigh in after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in 2022
upheld the Texas law. The decision created a split with the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the 11th Circuit, which struck down key provisions of the Florida
law earlier that year.

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All the of appeals court judges who have considered the Florida and Texas laws
were nominated by Republican presidents. Judge Kevin Newsom, a Trump nominee on
the 11th Circuit, wrote the unanimous opinion blocking Florida’s law. Another
Trump nominee, Judge Andrew Oldham of the 5th Circuit, wrote a conflicting
opinion upholding the Texas law.



The Supreme Court temporarily put the Texas law on hold in May 2022.
Conservative Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and
Neil M. Gorsuch, said he had not made up his mind about the novel legal
questions presented by the case governing a “ground-breaking Texas law that
addresses the power of dominant social media corporations to shape public
discussion of the important issues of the day.”

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“It is not at all obvious how our existing precedents, which predate the age of
the internet, should apply to large social media companies,” Alito wrote.

When he was an appeals court judge, conservative Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh
provided a window into his thinking in several cases involving the First
Amendment and government regulation of communications companies.

“When a market is competitive, direct interference with First Amendment free
speech rights in the name of competition is typically unnecessary and
constitutionally inappropriate,” Kavanaugh wrote in a 2010 case involving cable
company regulations.

A NEWSPAPER OR A TELEGRAPH?

The case hinges on divergent interpretations of how law set in the era of
newsprint and telegraphs should apply to social media, which has evolved into
the dominant arena for American political debate.

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NetChoice argues that the Supreme Court should treat companies like newspapers
and shield their right to exert “editorial discretion” about what videos or
accounts appear on their services.

Paul Clement, a former solicitor general representing NetChoice, told the court
the laws unfairly target large platforms, omitting smaller sites, including the
right-leaning companies, Parler and Gab.

Florida has “unabashedly singled out certain companies for these onerous
restrictions based on unconcealed hostility to how they exercise their editorial
discretion,” Clement wrote. “When it comes to disseminating speech, decisions
about what messages to include and exclude are for private parties — not the
government — to make.”

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Though the Reddit case was dismissed on procedural grounds, the company said in
a brief to the Supreme Court that it foreshadows the “the flood of potential
lawsuits” companies could face under the Texas and Florida laws. Reddit said in
a brief submitted to the court that the view that the character Wesley Crusher
is a “soy boy” is “undoubtedly protected by the First Amendment.”

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“The user who made that post on Reddit would be entitled to hold a sign with
that message in a public park or to print and distribute leaflets making that
claim,” the company wrote. “But he did not have a right to express that message
in a digital space managed and controlled by others.”

But Florida and Texas argue the laws regulate the actions that companies take,
not their speech, and do not fall under the First Amendment. Platforms are
“gatekeepers of the ‘modern public square,’” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton
argued in a brief in the case, and some decisions to remove people or posts
amount to discrimination, he said. Paxton writes that social networks should be
classified as “common carriers,” a designation that governments have applied to
ensure the public can access key utilities such as phone companies and
railroads.



“Like the telegraph companies of yore, the social media giants of today use
their control over the mechanics of this ‘modern public square,’ to direct — and
often stifle — public discourse,” Paxton wrote in his brief.

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Tech companies have frequently invoked the First Amendment to fight against
state laws, with mixed success. In December, a federal judge in California
dismissed a lawsuit from X, formerly known as Twitter, challenging the state’s
social media content moderation laws under the First Amendment. Several months
earlier, a federal judge blocked another law in the state intended to protect
children online, after NetChoice argued the provision would pressure the
companies to become “roving censors.”

First Amendment experts say that both sides’ arguments in the Florida and Texas
cases are flawed. The court needs to reach a nuanced decision that rejects both
sides’ “extreme views of the First Amendment,” said Scott Wilkens, senior
counsel at the Knight First Amendment Institute.

He also warned that the court must consider how rapidly the politics of social
networks can evolve. Since the laws were first enacted in 2021, Elon Musk
purchased Twitter and made policy decisions that have allowed conservative
accounts to flourish on the platform. Facebook and other companies have made
cuts to teams that respond to misinformation and harmful content.

“It’s very important for the future of public discourse online that the Supreme
Court take the longer view when it decides the NetChoice cases,” Wilkens said.
“The fears and concerns about social media platforms today may not be those of
tomorrow. We don’t want a decision that can’t stand the test of time.”

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