Baltimore Sun

Justices seem wary about protection­s for tech firms

Case involves law shielding platforms over posts by users

- By Adam Liptak

WASHINGTON — In a case with the potential to alter the very structure of the internet, the Supreme Court on Tuesday explored the limits of a federal law that shields social media platforms from legal responsibi­lity for what users post on their sites.

The justices seemed to view the positions taken by the two sides as too extreme and expressed doubts about their own competence to find a middle ground. “These are not the nine greatest experts on the internet,” Justice Elena Kagan said of the Supreme Court.

Others had practical concerns. Justice Brett Kavanaugh said the court should not “crash the digital economy.”

The case was brought by the family of Nohemi Gonzalez, a 23-year-old college student who was killed in a restaurant in Paris during the terrorist attacks in November 2015 , which also targeted the Bataclan concert hall. Eric Schnapper, a lawyer for the family, argued that YouTube, a subsidiary of Google, bore responsibi­lity because it had used algorithms to push Islamic State group videos to interested viewers, using informatio­n that the company had collected about them.

“We are focusing on the recommenda­tion function,” Schnapper said.

But Justice Clarence Thomas said that recommenda­tions were vital to making internet platforms useful. “If you’re interested in cooking,” he said, “you don’t want thumbnails on light jazz.” He later added, “I see these as suggestion­s.”

The federal law at issue in the case, Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, also shields online platforms from lawsuits over their decisions to take content down. The case gives the justices the opportunit­y to narrow the scope of the shield and expose the platforms to lawsuits over whether they had steered people to posts that promote extremism, advocate violence, harm reputation­s and cause emotional distress.

Schnapper said YouTube should be liable for its algorithm, which he said systematic­ally recommende­d videos inciting violence and supporting terrorism. The algorithm, he said, was YouTube’s speech and distinct from what users of the platform had posted.

Kagan pressed Schnapper on the limits of his argument. Did he also take issue with the algorithms Facebook and Twitter use to generate people’s feeds? Or with search engines?

Schnapper said all of those could lose protection under some circumstan­ces, a response that seemed to surprise Kagan.

Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked about whether Twitter users could be sued for retweeting ISIS videos, using an alternativ­e name for the Islamic State group. Schnapper said the law at issue in the case might allow such a suit.

Section 230 was enacted in 1996. It was a reaction to a decision holding an online message board liable for what a user had posted because the service had engaged in some content moderation.

The provision said, “No provider or user of an interactiv­e computer service

shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any informatio­n provided by another informatio­n content provider.” The provision helped enable the rise of social networks like Facebook and Twitter by ensuring that the sites did not assume legal liability for every post.

Malcolm Stewart, a lawyer for the Biden administra­tion, argued in support of the family in the case, Gonzalez v. Google. He said that successful lawsuits based on recommenda­tions would be rare but that the immunity provided by Section 230 was

generally unavailabl­e.

Lisa Blatt, a lawyer for Google, said the provision gave the company complete protection from suits like the one brought by Gonzalez’s family. YouTube’s algorithms are a form of editorial curation like search engine results or Twitter feeds, she said. Without the ability to provide content of interest to users, she said, the internet would be a useless jumble.

A ruling against Google, she said, would either force sites to take down any content that was remotely

problemati­c or to allow all content no matter how vile.

Kagan asked Blatt if Section 230 would protect “a pro-ISIS” algorithm or one that promoted defamatory speech. Blatt said yes.

Section 230 has faced criticism across the political spectrum. Many liberals say it has shielded tech platforms from responsibi­lity for disinforma­tion, hate speech and violent content. Some conservati­ves say the provision has allowed the platforms to grow so powerful that they can effectivel­y exclude voices on the right.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Jose Hernandez, left, and Beatriz Gonzalez, seen Tuesday, are the stepfather and mother of Nohemi Gonzalez. She was killed in a 2015 terrorist attack in France.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Jose Hernandez, left, and Beatriz Gonzalez, seen Tuesday, are the stepfather and mother of Nohemi Gonzalez. She was killed in a 2015 terrorist attack in France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States