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SCOTUS To Hear Case Involving Govt.-Social Media Interaction

Webster

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(The Guardian) The supreme court will hear oral arguments on Monday in Murthy v Missouri, a case with the potential to radically redefine how the US government interacts with social media companies.

The suit is the culmination of years of a Republican-backed legal campaign arguing that efforts by federal agencies and Joe Biden’s White House to reduce misinformation online constitute censorship.

Central to the case is whether the White House violated free speech protections during the Covid-19 pandemic, when government officials requested that Twitter, Facebook and other social networks remove misinformation about the coronavirus. The lawsuit accuses the government of “coercing” tech platforms to change their policies, block content and suspend users.

The complaint was filed by attorneys general in Louisiana and Missouri as well as rightwing individuals such as conspiracy site founder Jim Hoft. If the courts decide in their favor, the White House would be blocked from contacting social media companies, as happened when a lower court sided with the plaintiffs.

The Biden administration has argued that officials did not coerce or threaten social media platforms. It also argues that federal agencies have routinely communicated with social media platforms about terrorist group organizing or foreign influence campaigns, which has prompted tech companies to voluntarily enforce their own policies that ban such content.

 
Misinformation. ROFL! More like inconvenient truths.

Even if what they wanted off was misinformation, taking it off of social media is the worst way to do it. That causes more conspiracy theories and leads to more people believing said disinformation.
I never considered it like that. Then again, only those who take an interest in the news would be aware. A bit like at the start of the war in Ukraine, many Russians believed Putin to be the good guy due to propaganda.
 
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