Rome News-Tribune

Judge dismisses Elon Musk’s lawsuit against anti-hate watchdog on free-speech grounds

- By Nathan Solis

A federal judge on Monday dismissed a lawsuit brought by the company formerly known as Twitter, which sued a hate-speech watchdog group it blamed for a loss of millions of dollars in advertisin­g.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ruled that the lawsuit was intended to punish the Center for Countering Digital Hate for its criticism of X, and so violated California’s ban on lawsuits designed to squelch speech.

After he acquired Twitter in October 2022, Elon Musk welcomed back numerous users who had been suspended for sending tweets that violated its terms of service, and he slashed the number of people who enforced those terms and moderated conversati­ons on the platform. But his support for free speech on X had its limits; for example, X has at times blocked people from posting links to their work on other social media networks.

X filed suit last July against the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a nonprofit research and advocacy group, after the organizati­on documented the rise of ANTI-LGBTQ hate speech, misinforma­tion and other trends around user accounts on the platform during Musk’s tenure.

Major advertiser­s like Disney, IBM and Apple pulled their content after Musk endorsed an antisemiti­c tweet; he then expressed his frustratio­n in a series of online posts about the loss of advertiser­s since taking over the company. The social media giant claimed it lost “at least tens of millions of dollars” in advertisin­g partially because of the center’s reports, according to the company’s lawsuit.

X Corp. sued the nonprofit for breach of contract, claiming that center’s researcher­s abused their access to user data and mischaract­erized the informatio­n in their reports, articles and calls for companies to take their advertisin­g dollars elsewhere. X Corp. compared the center to an “activist organizati­on masqueradi­ng as (a) research agenc(y).”

In November, attorneys for the center moved to strike X Corp.’s lawsuit under a California law addressing “strategic lawsuits against public participat­ion” — that is, suits intended to censor, intimidate and silence critics.

On Monday, Breyer granted that ANTI-SLAPP motion, denied X Corp.’s motion to re-plead its case and granted the center’s request to strike and dismiss the suit. Breyer also granted a request to dismiss X Corp.’s claims against the European Climate Foundation.

“Sometimes it is unclear what is driving a litigation, and only by reading between the lines of a complaint can one attempt to surmise a plaintiff’s true purpose,” Breyer said in a 52-page order filed Monday. “Other times, a complaint is so unabashedl­y and vociferous­ly about one thing that there can be no mistaking that purpose. This case represents the latter circumstan­ce. This case is about punishing the defendants for their speech.”

Breyer went on to write that X Corp. brought the case “in order to punish CCDH for CCDH publicatio­ns that criticized X Corp. — and perhaps in order to dissuade others who might wish to engage in such criticism.”

The court pointed out that X Corp. did not file a defamation lawsuit, which was significan­t — if the platform had, the center’s lawyers would have gained the right to examine X Corp.’s internal communicat­ions about the content on its platform.

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