California’s Social Media Bill Flies In The Face Of The First Amendment – Techdirt

from the you-can-protect-children-without-infringing-on-the-1st-amendment dept

California has officially joined the growing list of states attempting to regulate how social media companies run their platforms. The states proposed legislation, however, faces a major legal obstacle: the Constitution.

California lawmakers are marching ahead with AB 2408, the Social Media Platform Duty to Children Act. On June 28, the Judiciary Committee unanimously passed an amended version of the bill, tweaking several provisions. Next, AB 2408 must pass the Senate Appropriations Committee and the California Senate before governor Gavin Newsom may sign the bill into law.

AB 2408 would impose a duty on social media platforms to avoid addicting minor users. Although protecting minors is a noble cause, regulating how social media design their services likely violates the First Amendment, which protects platforms right to curate content based on their editorial discretion.

As with most bills, the devils in the details. AB 2408s structure and prohibitions would limit platforms abilities to arrange and moderate content for minors.

AB 2408 defines Addict as the act of knowingly or negligently caus[ing] addiction through any act or omission. The bill defines Addiction as use of one or more social media platforms resulting in preoccupation or obsession with, or withdrawal or difficulty to cease or reduce use in addition to physical, mental, emotional, developmental, or material harms to the user.

The bill allows the Attorney General to sue social media platforms for implementing a design, feature, or affordance which leads to addiction. To prevail under AB 2408, a plaintiff must prove that a minor became addicted and was therefore harmed, that a design or feature on the platform was a substantial factor in the addiction, and that it was reasonably foreseeable that the design or feature would lead to addiction.

A recent amendment removed a private right of action which would have allowed minor users and parents to sue platforms directly. Lawmakers also changed the definition of social media platform. The amendments, however, do little to change the bills constitutionality.

In short, AB 2408 aims to prohibit social media platforms from building features which the platforms know, or ought to know, will result in addiction for minors.

In general, social media platforms design features to make their platforms more useful or enjoyable. For example, any internet platform worth its salt uses algorithms to display, recommend, and tailor content based on a users browsing activity and interests. By restricting how social media companies build and use these features, AB 2408 interferes with their editorial discretion by limiting how platforms display and amplify content.

AB 2408 appears less objectionable than the social media regulations currently brewing in Texas and Florida, which are geared towards forcing platforms to host conservative content. Ultimately, however, all three bills seek to regulate how social media platforms moderate content. Its unlikely these bills withstand First Amendment challenges.

Texass and Floridas social media bills are already running into trouble in court. On May 31, the Supreme Court suspended Texass HB20, reimposing a preliminary injunction on enforcement of the legislation.

Just eight days earlier, the U.S.federal Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that Floridas social media bill violates the First Amendment. Circuit Judge Kevin Newsom explained: Put simply, with minor exceptions, the government cant tell a private person or entity what to say or how to say it.

The court concluded that social media platforms content-moderation decisions constitute protected exercises of editorial judgment, and that the provisions of the new Florida law that restrict large platforms ability to engage in content moderation unconstitutionally burden that prerogative.

Proponents of AB 2408 argue that the bill only regulates business conduct, not speech. But limiting platforms abilities to build features used to display content implicates their constitutionally protected editorial judgment.

In Reno v. ACLU, the Supreme Court applied the First Amendment to the Internet, striking down provisions of the 1996 Communications Decency Act which criminalized the intentional transmission of obscene or indecent messages and information depicting or describing sexual or excretory activities or organs in an offensive manner. The Court found no basis for qualifying the level of First Amendment scrutiny that should be applied to the Internet.

Twenty years earlier, in Miami Herald v. Tornillo, the Supreme Court held that the government cannot regulate a newspapers choice of material or the decisions made as to limitations on the size and content of the paper.

Social media features designed to display content to users are analogous to newspaper editors dictating the size and content of their paper. Just as it protects newspapers, the First Amendment likely limits Californias authority to punish Internet platforms for their editorial decisions related to displaying and arranging content on their services. Consequently, AB 2408 faces the same First Amendment roadblocks as the Texas and Florida bills.

Protecting children is important. Thats undeniably true. Lawmakers, however, must pursue these policy objectives within the confines of the Constitution.

Andy Jung is a Legal Fellow at TechFreedom, a non-profit, non-partisan think tank focused on technology law and policy. Andy received his law degree from Antonin Scalia Law School in Arlington, VA. Before law school, Andy worked for software startup companies in California.

Filed Under: 1st amendment, ab 2408, addiction, california, content moderation, for the children, protect the children, social media

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California's Social Media Bill Flies In The Face Of The First Amendment - Techdirt

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