Published: 11:14, August 15, 2023 | Updated: 13:10, August 15, 2023
Biden administration tells top court to review social media laws
By Reuters

This photo shows the US Supreme Court in Washington on June 29. (PHOTO / XINHUA)

President Joe Biden's administration urged the US Supreme Court to take up a dispute over Republican-backed laws in Texas and Florida that would undercut efforts by social media companies to curb content deemed objectionable on their platforms.

The states call the actions impermissible censorship.

The justices are considering taking up two cases involving challenges to the state laws brought by technology industry groups including NetChoice, whose members include Meta Platforms Inc,  Alphabet Inc, and X, formerly known as Twitter.

Supporters of the laws, passed in 2021, have argued that social media platforms have silenced conservative voices, while advocates of content moderation have argued for the need to stop misinformation and advocacy for extremist causes.

Supporters of the laws, passed in 2021, have argued that social media platforms have silenced conservative voices, while advocates of content moderation have argued for the need to stop misinformation and advocacy for extremist causes

Florida is seeking to revive its law after a lower court ruled largely against it, while the industry groups are appealing a separate lower court decision upholding the Texas law, which the Supreme Court blocked at an earlier stage of the case.

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Invited to weigh in on the dispute, the Justice Department on Monday said the cases merit review because the laws burden the platforms' rights under the US Constitution's First Amendment, which protects freedom of speech.

"When a social-media platform selects, edits, and arranges third-party speech for presentation to the public, it engages in activity protected by the First Amendment," the Justice Department said in a written brief.

The cases would test the argument made by the industry groups that the First Amendment protects platforms' editorial discretion and prohibits governments from forcing them to publish content against their will.

The companies have said that without editorial discretion their websites would be overrun with spam, bullying, extremism and hate speech.

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Florida's law requires large platforms to "host some speech that they might otherwise prefer not to host" by disclosing censorship rules and prohibiting the banning of any political candidates. Texas' law forbids censoring users based on "viewpoint."