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FIREto Supreme Court: Only you can protect free speech online.

Joe Ravi / Wikipedia.org
Government interference with new speech technologies is nothing new, but freedom of speech online has come increasingly under threat in recent years. On Dec. 6, 2023, FIREfiled an amicus curiae 鈥 鈥渇riend of the court鈥 鈥 brief in the NetChoice cases seeking to defend free speech for social media platforms. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief explains that the First Amendment protects the right of all private publishers, from printing press operators to Instagram, to selectively edit, curate, and publish content free from government intrusion.
Internet freedom under threat: Texas and Florida regulate social media platforms
This case consolidates two different appeals involving NetChoice, an industry trade group for social media platforms and other internet companies. In 2021, convinced that large social media companies were making content moderation decisions biased against conservatives and Republicans, Florida and Texas decided to even the score. They passed laws that placed content moderation decisions under state supervision. Texas law prohibits large social media platforms from engaging in viewpoint-based moderation of users鈥 posts (such as deleting political posts perceived as right-wing), and Florida law bars the removal or 鈥渄eplatforming鈥 of certain users, including political figures. Both laws require platforms to explain and justify to the state their decisions to remove content or users.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit blocked the deplatforming and justification provisions of the Florida law because it viewed social media platforms as 鈥渁 new and different medium for communication鈥 to which 鈥渢he basic principles of freedom of speech and the press鈥 apply. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit similar provisions in the Texas law because, in its view, the Texas law bans 鈥渃ensorship,鈥 not speech. The Supreme Court of the United States agreed to hear both appeals.
Texas and Florida chose to disregard the First Amendment to try to further political ends. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief asks the Supreme Court to intervene and guarantee the continued freedom of speech on the Internet for generations to come.
The Fifth Circuit was wrong and the Eleventh Circuit was right: As private actors, social media platforms have the First Amendment right to choose what is said on their sites and who gets to say it.
Editorial discretion is not censorship, and it is protected by the First Amendment
As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief explains, while 鈥渢he printing press was 鈥榖orn free鈥 in the United States by virtue of the First Amendment,鈥 throughout much of the twentieth century, the Supreme Court allowed governments to interfere with speech transmitted via 鈥渃inema, broadcast radio and television, and cable television, among other emerging media.鈥 But over time, the Court came to that, while each method of communication may differ in its particulars, the 鈥渂asic principles of freedom of speech and the press, like the First Amendment鈥檚 command, do not vary. Those principles . . . make freedom of expression the rule.鈥 The Court went on to recognize that the First Amendment protects various forms of media, including , broadcasting, cable television, video games, and the internet.
Because social media platforms are private actors, they do not 鈥渃ensor鈥 users when they choose what posts and accounts to delete or deprioritize. Instead, they engage in editorial decision-making, much like a newspaper engages in editing by selecting what 鈥渓etters to the editor鈥 to publish. And as the Court held in Miami Herald Publishing Company v. Tornillo and other cases, the First Amendment bans government 鈥渋ntrusion into the function of editors.鈥 That is because the First Amendment protects Americans鈥 鈥 and American companies鈥 鈥 right to speak, whether they choose to say everything, something, or nothing at all.
Editorial discretion is speech, and calling it censorship does not make it so. As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 amicus brief points out, the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 鈥渙bsessive misuse of the term 鈥榗ensorship鈥欌 鈥 145 times, to be exact 鈥 鈥渂rings to mind Inigo Montoya鈥檚 immortal words from The Princess Bride: You keep using that word. I don鈥檛 think it means what you think it means.鈥
For similar reasons, forcing social media platforms to justify their editorial decisions in removing user posts or accounts also violates the First Amendment. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief put it best:
Any law authorizing state oversight of moderation decisions intrudes deeply into platforms鈥 editorial prerogatives. It does not matter whether platforms enforce their 鈥渙wn鈥 policies. Imposing time limits on the review process and empowering government functionaries to assess the adequacy of platforms鈥 responses is a significant burden.
And that significant burden violates the First Amendment.
Texas and Florida chose to disregard the First Amendment to try to further political ends. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief asks the Supreme Court to intervene and guarantee the continued freedom of speech on the Internet for generations to come.
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