San Diego Union-Tribune

COURT WRESTLES WITH SOCIAL MEDIA LAWSUIT SHIELD

Justices question role of algorithms, reach of immunity

- BY MARK SHERMAN Sherman writes for The Associated Press.

In its first case about the federal law that is credited with helping create the modern Internet, the Supreme Court seemed unlikely Tuesday to side with a family wanting to hold Google liable for the death of their daughter in a terrorist attack.

At the same time, the justices also signaled in arguments lasting two and a half hours that they are wary of Google’s claims that a 1996 law, Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, affords it and other companies far-reaching immunity from lawsuits over their targeted recommenda­tions of videos, documents and other content.

The case highlighte­d the tension between technology policy fashioned a generation ago and the reach of today’s social media, numbering billions of posts each day.

“We really don’t know about these things. You know, these are not like the nine greatest experts on the Internet,” Justice Elena Kagan said of herself and her colleagues, several of whom smiled at the descriptio­n.

Congress, not the court, should make needed changes to a law passed early in the Internet age, Kagan said.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, one of six conservati­ves, agreed with his liberal colleague in a case that seemed to cut across ideologica­l lines.

“Isn’t it better,” Kavanaugh asked, to keep things the way they are and “put the burden on Congress to change that?”

The case before the court stems from the death of American college student Nohemi Gonzalez in a terrorist attack in Paris in 2015. Members of her family were in the courtroom to listen to arguments about whether they can sue Google-owned YouTube for helping the Islamic State spread its message and attract new recruits, in violation of the Anti-Terrorism Act. Lower courts sided with Google.

The justices used a variety of examples to probe what YouTube does when it uses computer algorithms to recommend videos to viewers, whether content produced by terrorists or cat lovers. Chief Justice John Roberts suggested what YouTube is doing isn’t “pitching something in particular to the person who’s made the request” but just a “21st century version” of what has been taking place for a long time, putting together a group of things the person may want to look at.

Justice Clarence Thomas asked whether YouTube uses the same algorithm to recommend rice pilaf recipes and terrorist content. Yes, he was told.

Lower courts have broadly interprete­d Section 230 to protect the industry, which the companies and their allies say has fueled the meteoric growth of the Internet by protecting businesses from lawsuits over posts by users and encouragin­g the removal of harmful content.

But critics argue that the companies have not done enough to police and moderate content and that the law should not block lawsuits over the recommenda­tions that point viewers to more material that interests them and keeps them online longer.

Lisa Blatt, representi­ng Google, told the court that recommenda­tions are just a way of organizing all that informatio­n.

Roberts, though, was among several justices who questioned Blatt about whether YouTube should have the same legal protection for its recommenda­tions as for hosting videos.

“They appear pursuant to the algorithms that your clients have. And those algorithms must be targeted to something. And that targeting, I think, is fairly called a recommenda­tion, and that is Google’s. That’s not the provider of the underlying informatio­n,” Roberts said.

Reflecting the complexity of the issue and the court’s seeming caution, Justice Neil Gorsuch suggested another factor in recommenda­tions made by YouTube and others, noting that “most algorithms are designed these days to maximize profits.”

Gorsuch suggested the court could send the case back to a lower court without weighing in on the extent of Google’s legal protection­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States