"Supreme Court to Decide on Social Media Speech Mandates"

The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on two cases that challenge laws in Florida and Texas seeking to limit the ability of large online platforms to curate or ban content, with potential implications for free speech and the future of online public discourse. The cases will test the constitutionality of laws that aim to fight what lawmakers claim are rules that suppress conservative speech, and a ruling for the states could force social media companies to carry "lawful but awful" speech, impacting not only big social media platforms but also traditional publishers, individual moderators, and nonprofit organizations. The decision will have far-reaching implications for state and federal legislation regulating social media platforms' content moderation and could influence the future of public discourse online.
- Supreme Court to hear whether Texas, Florida can force social media to host speech The Verge
- Social Media disclosure requirements are unconstitutional compelled speech The Hill
- SCOTUS to hear social media law cases The Hill
- Will the Supreme Court order Facebook and X to host election lies? Slate
- Meet Big Tech's legal bulldog at the center of two major Supreme Court cases Fast Company
Reading Insights
0
1
11 min
vs 12 min read
94%
2,229 → 125 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on The Verge