On Monday, the Supreme Court began hearing oral arguments in two cases that have the potential to remake online speech in America by weighing how the First Amendment applies to social media platforms.
Next week, the Supreme Court will hear arguments for two cases that could determine the fate of social media content moderation. In 2021, the states of Florida and Texas both passed laws that aim to ...
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday is hearing arguments on whether laws in Texas and Florida that ban social media companies from removing content are constitutional. A decision will be made by June.
Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Lambert / Getty. On Friday, the Court announced it would be putting these cases on its docket. The resulting decisions could be profound: “This would be—I think ...
The NetChoice decision means curating, compiling, and moderating a feed is a First Amendment-protected activity. The NetChoice decision means curating, compiling, and moderating a feed is a First ...
The Supreme Court ruled today in two cases that could have a major impact on how social media platforms operate and how the government can interfere on behalf of political speech on these platforms.
The Supreme Court is poised to decide whether a pair of state laws are allowed to reshape the ability of social media companies to control what does — and doesn’t — appear on their platforms. Last ...
The Supreme Court wrestled Monday with a pair of cases that could help define the future of the Internet. Legal experts say they're the most important First Amendment cases in a generation. The ...
The Supreme Court will hear an array of legal arguments involving social media’s free speech wars this term, with a series of dicey cases that could reshape how public officials and U.S. government ...