The Palm Beach Post

First Amendment, meet the world of 24/7 messaging

- Bill Cotterell

To swipe a slogan from a long-ago Oldsmobile advertisem­ent, this is not your father’s First Amendment — or your great, great, ever-so-great grandfathe­r’s.

Florida is in the middle of an epic legal battle over concepts of free speech, press freedom and unimpeded commerce. It’s a clash between internet publishers, who want the government to leave them alone, and Republican leaders who insist that social media platforms are too powerful to be run by giant, faceless corporatio­ns that can — and do — impose their tastes on all of us.

Essentiall­y, a four-hour oral argument last week at the U.S. Supreme Court was about the difference between editing and censoring.

The conservati­ve governors of Florida and Texas persuaded their Republican-run legislatur­es to limit how socialmedi­a companies can curate content. The feeling was that, in the guise of rooting out hate speech and misinforma­tion, a bunch of Silicon Valley liberals stifle conservati­ve commentary. Exhibit A was the “de-platformin­g” of former President Donald Trump after his supporters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

A coalition of very rich tech giants, through two industry organizati­ons called NetChoice and the Computer & Communicat­ions Industry Associatio­n, got an injunction against the Florida law, claiming a First Amendment right to moderate what is published on sites like Facebook, X and YouTube.

The organizati­ons argued that no advertiser, serious commentato­r or reader wants to share a social-media site with some lunatic raving that the earth is flat, the moon landings were fake or the Jan. 6 rioters were just visiting the U.S. Capitol.

News reports indicated at least four justices seemed skeptical of the Florida and Texas laws. But it’s also very possible that, rather than ruling late this summer, the court will want more of a record in the cases and punt them back to lower courts.

But it’s time to reinterpre­t the First Amendment. That scares the daylights out of conservati­ves and liberals alike, but can the age of artificial intelligen­ce and 24/7 messaging be governed by the best minds of the 18th century?

When the nation’s founders made free speech the very first amendment added to the Constituti­on, a printing press was a big contraptio­n that might take a day or a week to crank out paper pages with type set by hand. And everyone knew the local printer.

Now, messages can be hammered home on a keyboard at light speed — including fake images aimed at very specific audiences — and you don’t know who puts it out, or why.

Thomas Jefferson, etc., dealt with a different world back then. We’re not a frontier continent with European powers vying for influence anymore.

Press law has been much in the political news recently. Trump said he’d like to “open up” libel laws to make it easier to sue media companies, but he didn’t do it. Sarah Palin unsuccessf­ully sued The New York Times over an advertisem­ent. Fox settled for $787 million last year for lying about a voting systems company. In Florida, a move to make it easier to sue for defamation has fizzled in this year’s legislativ­e session, but it will be back year after year.

Our state lost a landmark media case in the nation’s highest court a half-century ago. A House candidate sued the Miami Herald under a 1913 “Right to Reply” law, which required newspapers to print rebuttal editorials from political candidates they did not endorse. The Supreme Court unanimousl­y held that — just as government can’t forbid ideas from being spoken or published — it may not force the media to say something they don’t want.

Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote that “press responsibi­lity is not mandated by the Constituti­on and … cannot be legislated.”

Well, maybe press responsibi­lity can’t be legislated, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t keep trying, while allowing wide latitude for a free-wheeling public debate of issues and events.

Legitimate news sources like The New York Times or NBC have standards of accuracy and fairness (although we all miss the mark sometimes), yet much of the internet is a free-fire zone with no pretense of truth or balance.

Burger’s idea of “press responsibi­lity” wouldn’t require a First Amendment rewrite. The big social-media companies could accommodat­e all views and still bar the offensive stuff, just like they already keep porn or threats of violence off their sites. It would be a never-ending argument, with some people feeling unfairly shut out and others objecting to things they don’t like.

But isn’t that what social media use is all about — a series of big, unending arguments?

Bill Cotterell is a retired capitol reporter for United Press Internatio­nal and the Tallahasse­e Democrat. He can be reached at bcotterell@govexec.com.

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Tallahasse­e Democrat USA TODAY NETWORK - FLA.

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