US Supreme Court kicks rulings on social media censorship back to lower courts

Judges urge courts in Florida, Texas to reexamine laws that limit ability to control content; firms say their right to censor is key to preventing rampant bullying and hate speech

A photo taken on April 3, 2024 shows the logo of US online social media and social networking service Facebook on a smartphone screen in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany. (Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP)
A photo taken on April 3, 2024 shows the logo of US online social media and social networking service Facebook on a smartphone screen in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany. (Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — The US Supreme Court on Monday threw out a pair of judicial decisions involving challenges to Republican-backed laws in Florida and Texas designed to restrict the power of social media companies to curb content that the platforms deem objectionable.

The justices directed lower appeals courts to reconsider their decisions regarding these 2021 laws authorizing the states to regulate the content-moderation practices of large social media platforms. Tech industry trade groups challenged the two laws under the US Constitution’s First Amendment limits on the government’s ability to restrict speech.

The ruling came on the final day of the Supreme Court’s term that began in October.

The laws were challenged by tech industry trade groups NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), whose members include Facebook parent Meta Platforms META.O, Alphabet’s Google GOOGL.O, which owns YouTube, as well as TikTok and Snapchat owner Snap SNAP.N.

Lower courts split on the issue, blocking key provisions of Florida’s law while upholding the Texas measure. Neither law has gone into effect due to the litigation.

At issue was whether the First Amendment protects the editorial discretion of social media platforms and prohibits governments from forcing companies to publish content against their will. The companies have said that without such discretion — including the ability to block or remove content or users, prioritize certain posts over others, or include additional context — their websites would be overrun with spam, bullying, extremism, and hate speech.

The Supreme Court in Washington, June 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Many Republicans have argued that social media platforms stifle conservative voices in the guise of content moderation, branding this as censorship.

US President Joe Biden’s administration opposed the Florida and Texas laws, arguing that the content-moderation restrictions violate the First Amendment by forcing platforms to present and promote content they view as objectionable.

Officials from Florida and Texas countered that the content-moderation actions by these companies fall outside the protection of the First Amendment because such conduct is not itself speech.

The Texas law would forbid social media companies with at least 50 million monthly active users from acting to “censor” users based on “viewpoint,” and allows either users or the Texas attorney general to sue to enforce it.

Florida’s law would constrain the ability of large platforms to exclude certain content by prohibiting the censorship or banning of a political candidate or “journalistic enterprise.”

Another issue presented in the cases was whether the state laws unlawfully burden the free speech rights of social media companies by requiring them to provide users with individualized explanations for certain content-moderation decisions, including the removal of posts from their platforms.

This is not the first time the Supreme Court has addressed free speech rights in the digital age during its current term.

Rioters supporting then-US president Donald Trump try to break through a police barrier at the Capitol in Washington, on January 6, 2021. (Julio Cortez/AP)

The justices on March 15 decided that government officials can sometimes be sued under the First Amendment for blocking critics on social media. In another case, the justices on June 26 declined to impose limits on the way Biden’s administration may communicate with social media platforms, rejecting a First Amendment challenge to how US officials encouraged the removal of posts deemed misinformation, including about elections and COVID.

Florida sought to revive its law after the Atlanta-based 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled largely against it. The industry groups appealed a decision by the New Orleans-based 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals upholding the Texas law, which the Supreme Court blocked at an earlier stage of the case.

Conservative critics of “Big Tech” companies have cited as an example of what they called censorship the decision by the platform previously called Twitter to suspend then-US president Donald Trump shortly after the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by his supporters, with the company citing “the risk of further incitement of violence.”

Trump’s account has since been reinstated under Elon Musk, who now owns the company renamed X. Trump is the presumed Republican candidate, challenging Biden, a Democrat, in the US election on November 5 .

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