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LAWSUIT: New York canā€™t target protected online speech by calling it ā€˜hateful conductā€™

Eugene Volokh

Blogger Eugene Volokh is challenging a New York state law that would force him to police speech. (Tritton Productions)

  • First Amendment scholar joins online platforms Rumble and Locals to challenge New York law
  • Law goes into effect on Saturday

NEW YORK, N.Y., Dec. 1, 2022 ā€” Today, the FIREsued New York Attorney General Letitia James, challenging a new state law that forces websites and apps to address online speech that someone, somewhere finds humiliating or vilifying. 

The is titled ā€œSocial media networks; hateful conduct prohibited,ā€ but it actually targets speech the state doesnā€™t like ā€” even if that speech is fully protected by the First Amendment.

ā€œNew York politicians are slapping a speech-police badge on my chest because I run a blog,ā€ said plaintiff Eugene Volokh, who co-founded legal blog in 2002. ā€œI started the blog to share interesting and important legal stories, not to police readersā€™ speech at the governmentā€™s behest.ā€

The law forces internet platforms of all stripes to publish a policy explaining how they will respond to online expression that could ā€œvilify, humiliate, or incite violenceā€ based on a protected class, like religion, gender, or race. The law also requires the platforms to create a way for visitors to complain about ā€œhatefulā€ content or comments, and mandates that they answer complaints with a direct response. Refusal to comply could mean investigations from the attorney generalā€™s office, subpoenas, and daily fines of $1,000 per violation.

COURTESY PHOTOS OF PLAINTIFF EUGENE VOLOKH

New Yorkā€™s law doesnā€™t define ā€œvilify,ā€ ā€œhumiliate,ā€ or ā€œincite.ā€ Yet, it targets speech that could simply be perceived by someone, somewhere, at some point in time, to vilify or humiliate, rendering the lawā€™s scope entirely subjective. (The First Amendment does not protect inciting imminent violence, but New Yorkā€™s law offers no indication, as the First Amendment requires, that it applies only to speech directed to and likely to produce imminent lawless action.) 

What expression could the new law reach? Plenty of speech fully protected by the First Amendment, including but not at all limited to:

  • An atheistā€™s post ā€œvilifyingā€ people of faith by criticizing religion.
  • A posted video of John Oliver ā€œhumiliatingā€ the British people by criticizing the monarchy.
  • A comedianā€™s blog entry ā€œvilifyingā€ men by mocking gender stereotypes.
  • A post about Kathy Griffin ā€œhumiliatingā€ Christians by shouting ā€œSuck it, Jesus, this award is my God now!ā€ at an awards show.
  • Your comment on almost any website that could be considered by someone, somewhere, at some point in time, as ā€œhumiliatingā€ or ā€œvilifyingā€ a group based on protected class status like religion, gender, or race.

ā€œThe state of New York canā€™t turn bloggers into Big Brother, but itā€™s trying to do just that,ā€ said FIREattorney Daniel Ortner. ā€œThe government canā€™t burden online expression protected by the Constitution, whether itā€™s doing it in the name of combating hate or any other sentiment. Imagine a similar law requiring sites to publish a reporting policy for speech the state considers un-American ā€” that would be just as unconstitutional.ā€

Volokh, a constitutional law professor and First Amendment expert, is joined in the lawsuit by online platforms Rumble and Locals, which are, respectively, a video platform similar to YouTube, and a community-building platform that allows creators to connect directly with their audience.

Bloggers, commenters, websites, and apps around the country are ensnared by the New York law due to its broad definition of ā€œsocial media networksā€ as for-profit ā€œservice providersā€ that ā€œenable users to share any content.ā€ This vague wording means that the law can impact virtually any revenue-generating website that allows comments or posts and is accessible to New Yorkers ā€” but no government entity can legally compel blogs or other internet platforms to adopt its broad definition of ā€œhateful conduct.ā€ 

A recent issued by Attorney General Jamesā€™ office shows this law may be just the start of Empire State lawmakerā€™s attempt to silence protected speech online. Released in the wake of Mayā€™s tragic mass shooting by a white supremacist at a Buffalo supermarket, the report calls for further regulation of online speech ā€” recommendations that, if adopted, would also violate the First Amendment. 

ā€œWhat happened in Buffalo broke the nationā€™s heart, and the impulse to take action is understandable. But violating expressive rights online wonā€™t make us safer,ā€ said FIREsenior attorney Jay Diaz. ā€œIn the name of combating ā€˜hateful conduct,ā€™ New Yorkā€™s new law reaches a vast amount of everyday commentary ā€” jokes, political debates, random commentary, you name it. Thatā€™s a problem. The First Amendment protects all of us, and this new law doesnā€™t.ā€

The FIRE(¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought ā€” the most essential qualities of liberty. FIREeducates Americans about the importance of these inalienable rights, promotes a culture of respect for these rights, and provides the means to preserve them.

CONTACT:

Katie Kortepeter, Communications Campaign Manager, ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org

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