USA TODAY US Edition

Web content a key in high-court case

- John Fritze USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Jessica Guynn

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court is stepping into a messy political fight next month over the meaning of a 26-word law that Big Tech firms describe as a linchpin of the modern internet but that critics say has led to the promotion of terrorism.

A closely watched dispute between YouTube owner Google and the family of an American killed in an Islamic State group attack in Paris in 2015 will put the court in the middle of a conflict about when internet companies may be successful­ly sued for content on their sites. It could also, as Facebook owner Meta put it, turn the internet into a “disorganiz­ed collection of haphazardl­y assembled informatio­n.”

Potentiall­y at stake, the companies say, is the ability to get relevant results when searching Google.

The case, Gonzalez v. Google, centers on a law known as Section 230 that drew intense criticism from former President Donald Trump over accusation­s that social media companies throttled conservati­ve views. Many Democrats agree that the law needs an update.

Why Google is at the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Feb. 21 in a case about whether internet platforms may be liable for targeted recommenda­tions, such as when YouTube suggests a follow-up video. The family of an American killed in a terrorist attack says YouTube recommende­d videos that aided extremists.

Google and other internet platforms say recommendi­ng content is a “central building block” of the internet and that recommenda­tions aren’t endorsemen­ts. If platforms are liable for suggestion­s, they say, it could change what gets recommende­d on different platforms.

How Google could win

Section 230 says that an internet company can’t be treated as a publisher of content posted on its platform by a user. Google, and many lower courts, read that as also protecting the “disseminat­ion” of content online. Recommenda­tions like those offered by YouTube, Big Tech firms say, are part of that disseminat­ion.

“Recommenda­tion algorithms are what make it possible to find the needles in humanity’s largest haystack,” Google told the Supreme Court.

“The line between just providing access to content and actively promoting that content is a lot slipperier than initially appears,” said Christophe­r Yoo, a University of Pennsylvan­ia law professor. If the court rules against Google broadly, he said, “it may sweep in every finding tool we have on the internet today.”

How Gonzalez could win

Others say that lower courts have read too much protection for internet platforms into the words of the law. In a brief that doesn’t take a side in the case, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and other GOP lawmakers question how much Section 230 shields the companies from liability at all.

Conservati­ves see the case as part of a bigger fight against what they view as biased content moderation.

“The whole goal was to prevent things like sex traffickin­g and proliferat­ion of child pornograph­y,” said Sarah Parshall Perry, senior legal fellow at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation. “What it has become...is a shield for the moderation of content in keeping with the particular political perspectiv­es of the major tech companies.”

Others oppose Google’s interpreta­tion for different reasons. Common Sense Media, a child advocacy group, pointed to another practice by Big Tech it believes shouldn’t be shielded from liability: The collection of personal data.

“What gets recommende­d is based on the data collection,” said Jolina Cuaresma, the group’s senior counsel of privacy and tech policy. “Adolescent­s are really at an unfair disadvanta­ge here, because their brains are structural­ly different than ours.”

A decision is expected this year.

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