The court analyzes preemption under 230(c)(2)(A), but doesn't touch (c)(1). Normally this would bother me, because that's not how #Section230 works. But if you read it, Hinkle doesn't really decide between the 230 interpretations; this reads more like an "even if FL is right"
Hinkle was obviously not swayed by Florida's attempt to brush off platforms' curation as meaningless and expressionless. He seems to understand that those functions are vital for their products to be usable.
Remember that time when I said Hinkle wasn't impressed with the whole "social media platforms violate the First Amendment" argument?
He remains...unimpressed.
And how many times have I written basically this exact paragraph?
I'd disagree with Hinkle that 99% of content posted on social media is "invisible" to platforms for First Amendment purposes, but in any event, he gets this right: we're talking exactly about the cases at the margins, and Florida's intent is to control editorial discretion here
Surprisingly brief analysis of FAIR & PruneYard; I'd go further noting the contextual differences that make those cases not analogous, but note that Hinkle concludes that SB 7072 comepls platforms to change their speech by altering how they arrange and present speech. Very broad!
If the court is (rightly) convinced that how a platform chooses to display or organize content is First Amendment activity, that makes most any state regulation of content information a no-go. And that's how it should be.
Political showboating may get you the headlines, but it doesn't often get you a statute that holds up in court, @GovRonDeSantis.
Really glad to see speaker discrimination actually getting its due here.
Hinkle also very not impressed by Florida's treatment of the theme park exception. It was clear that Florida's strategy all along was to put it in there and tell the court it should just strike that part down instead of the statute. Hinkle isn't buying the ticket they're selling.
This here says it all. This is just a preliminary injunction decision, but it is exceedingly difficult for the government to come back from this and it rarely happens, expecially in the First Amendment world. It is a near-certain death knell to the constitutionality of a statute.
But if you need more convincing, Hinkle would toss it under intermediate scrutiny too. If Florida wants to save this law, it's going to have to pray for a VERY sympathetic 11th Circuit panel because it's looking grim.
Vagueness was never the primary argument, so this is not at all bothersome, and given the fact that Hinkle had two days to rule and found so strongly against 7072 on other grounds, there was literally no need to open this can of worms.
Note that Judge Hinkle didn't even bother to address common carriage. From my read, and his reference at argument to common carriage as an "analogy" for regulatability, he doesn't think it matters. No matter what you call it, he thinks it violates the First Amendment. He's right.
(that should read "content moderation" not "content information")
Here's the thing, though: whether it's cases on the margin is also irrelevant. Because what is on the margin is a wholly subjective function *of* editorial discretion. You simply could not write a law that would survive because we're talking about judgment calls.
There are things I would have worded differently or treated more thoroughly, but remember:
(a) This was all only ever a setup tor the 11th Circuit, and
(b) Hinkle had only two days to rule. You could wait 8 months for a motion ruling 1/3 the length.
I'm not pressed. It's a win
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1/ We are locked and loaded. Welcome to the livetweet of the preliminary injunction hearing in NetChoice v. Moody, where the court will hear arguments about whether Florida should be enjoined from enforcing its unconstitutional social media law #SB7072.
2/ We (@techfreedom) filed an amicus brief urging the court to do just that, and expect the arguments we anticipated in our brief to play a large role in today's hearings: techfreedom.org/wp-content/upl…
The hearing will start in just a few minutes, so hold on to your hats, folks.
Is @HEIHotels' CEO stoned? The shortage isn't because of wage competition. It's because the jobs don't pay enough *overall*. Why would tips be different? If you paid more & competitors matched, there'd be plenty of workers. Pay your fucking employees. JFC. businessinsider.com/labor-shortage…
It's not *my* job to make sure *you* don't suffer labor shortages because you don't pay employees enough, @HEIHotels.
In other news, I am suffering a labor shortage because I can't find someone to be my administrative assistant for $5,000 a year. Maybe Ted Darnall and @HEIHotels should commit to tipping someone $50k every year so this unjust lack of secretarial assistance can be remedied.
The plaintiffs had brought various tort claims against Facebook alleging that it facilitated sex trafficking.
2/ In addition to the negligence/products liability claims, Plaintiffs also brought claims under Texas's trafficking laws, opting not to proceed under federal sex trafficking law, which is not immunized under Section 230.
3/ SCOTX spent some pages bloviating about whether Justice Thomas's interpretation of Section 230 is right, ultimately concluding that they weren't going to follow it and instead agreed that the negligence/products liability claims should be dismissed pursuant to 230. All right.
I'm sorry, why is this a thing? The roads were clearly fine and it's not like the tornado was lingering about. Should companies not send delivery employees to a place that USPS was probably sending letter carriers just because there was damage? Total nonsense.
2/ As I said yesterday, this case is really about the First Amendment. Florida tried to frontload Section 230, appealing to judicial restraint. But even if the court ruled on Section 230 preemption in Florida's favor, it would then still have to address the First Amendment issue.
3/ On the other hand, if the court rules on the First Amendment issue favorably to the law's challengers, it doesn't need to decide on how expansively or restrictively to read Section 230, thus avoiding a landmine. The First Amendment *is* the issue, and should be the prime focus
Florida desperately wants to change the conversation to #Section230 instead of the First Amendment, because that's the conversation they've always wanted this to be about; it's the political hot button they want to feverishly mash.
3/ So they frontloaded the 230 discussion.
But they get off to a bad start by claiming that 230 was prompted only by the Stratton Oakmont, which held Prodigy liable for user content because it engaged in *some* content moderation.