Borger News-Herald

Paxton Urges SCOTUS to Allow States to Hold Big Tech Companies Accountabl­e When Illegal Activity Occurs

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Attorney General Paxton has filed a merits-stage amicus brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Gonzalez v. Google (Case No. 211333) and narrow the scope of Section 230 protection­s for “publishers.”

Enacted in 1996, Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act was designed to provide “publishers” narrow protection­s from defamation liability.

However, the courts have misinterpr­eted the law and allowed it to become a nearly allencompa­ssing blanket protection for certain companies, specifical­ly internet and Big Tech companies.

The boundless legal protection­s for these companies due to their perceived status as “publishers” has heretofore prevented states from holding Big Tech accountabl­e for numerous legal violations, even those that are unrelated to the publicatio­n of user content.

Gonzalez v. Google is one such example, in which the petitioner­s allege that Google’s own online recommenda­tions aided ISIS in its terror activities.

The amicus brief speaks to the limited nature of States’ ability to rectify damages stemming from internet companies breaking the law:

“Overbroad judicial interpreta­tions of Section 230 have harmed States and their citizens in two ways. First, a court infringes state sovereignt­y whenever it incorrectl­y holds that Section 230 prevents a State from enforcing its laws. Second, a court harms a State’s citizens whenever it misapplies Section 230 and improperly prevents those citizens from obtaining redress for wrongs committed online. This Court should stem the tide of those harms by faithfully interpreti­ng Section 230.”

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