Chicago Sun-Times

Seamy side of social media gets a boost from court ruling

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At a time when the nation has been hoping to see social media become a more responsibl­e and safer corporate citizen, it suddenly feels we are going in the wrong direction.

A 15-word ruling last Wednesday by two conservati­ve federal appellate judges has cleared the way for Texas residents to sue Facebook, Twitter and YouTube for blocking or restrictin­g what they post on those platforms. The ruling disagrees with other federal judges’ findings that online platforms have a First Amendment right to decide what appears on their sites. The case conceivabl­y could lead the conservati­ve-dominated U.S. Supreme Court to reinterpre­t First Amendment rights.

After those platforms became awash in threatenin­g, hateful and outright false posts that shaped the national discourse — on politics, the pandemic, race and more — to a surprising and unwelcome degree in recent years, the companies struggled to allow as much free expression as possible while warding off the worst abuses.

That didn’t sit well with some politician­s, who believe the policies put conservati­ves at a disadvanta­ge, though they have produced no evidence supporting that claim.

The Texas law, enacted after former President Donald Trump was banned from Twitter and which could be copied in other states, could be a tool to bring back the more unfettered and unpleasant online accusation­s and other posts the social media platforms sought to weed out.

Even if other states don’t follow suit, the difficulty of separating out who is using a social media site in Texas might lead the tech companies to abandon their oversight efforts everywhere.

Ideally, Congress would have agreed long ago on sensible policies that ushered social media platforms into a beneficial future, but there is little sign that will happen, not least because it is an extremely knotty problem.

The judges’ ruling not only plunges the world of social media platforms into uncertaint­y but also threatens to supercharg­e spam, harassment, hateful speech, spam bots, personal attacks and outright lies into an enormous online cesspool. The near-monopoly control of online conversati­on by big tech companies already has worried many people. This could make things worse.

It’s hard to predict where this case will wind up. On Friday, two

groups representi­ng big tech companies filed an emergency applicatio­n with the Supreme Court to block the Texas law. But any hopes of progress toward social media as better allies in the effort to achieve a more cohesive society suddenly feels farther out of reach.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON ?? A federal court ruling could clear the way for Texans to sue Twitter and other social media companies.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON A federal court ruling could clear the way for Texans to sue Twitter and other social media companies.

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