Search for: "NETCHOICE" Results 21 - 40 of 323
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
7 Mar 2024, 2:29 pm by Stewart Baker
There are too many provisions in those laws that some of the Justices considered reasonable for Netchoice to win a sweeping victory. [read post]
4 Mar 2024, 9:27 am by Eugene Volokh
This episode is about the Netchoice cases, and was recorded right after the oral arguments. [read post]
29 Feb 2024, 5:30 pm by Howard Bashman
“The Four Internet Analogies of the Apocalypse: How the Supreme Court in the Netchoice oral arguments got snagged on the most basic problem in the history of the Internet, and what that reveals about how they should rule. [read post]
28 Feb 2024, 7:46 am by Ben Sperry
  In the oral arguments in this week’s NetChoice cases, several questions from Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito suggested that they believed social-media companies engaged in “censorship,” conflating the right of private actors to set rules for their property with government oppression. [read post]
27 Feb 2024, 4:00 am by Michael C. Dorf
Characterizing social media platforms as essentially passive conduits for third-party speech (except when they deviate to engage in what Whitaker tendentiously referred to as "censorship"), he thought that the law did not target any protected speech, much less that it did so in an overly broad manner.At the other extreme, Netchoice's lawyer (and former U.S. [read post]
26 Feb 2024, 11:38 pm by Ilya Somin
NetChoice, cases challenging Florida and Texas state laws barring major social media firms from using most types of content moderation, thereby requiring them to host content they disapprove of. [read post]
26 Feb 2024, 11:01 am by Eric Goldman
The post Comments on the NetChoice/Moody/Paxton SCOTUS Oral Arguments appeared first on Technology & Marketing Law Blog. [read post]
26 Feb 2024, 6:20 am by Ellena Erskine
NetChoice, LLC and NetChoice, LLC v. [read post]
16 Feb 2024, 12:00 pm by Evan Brown
(One has to consider whether these would pass First Amendment scrutiny, particularly in light of recent decisions such as the one in NetChoice v. [read post]