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SCOTUS on the Internet: “It’s Complicated”

Slate News

Slate Podcasts

Politics, News, News Commentary

4.56K Ratings

🗓️ 25 February 2023

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For every person screaming about Section 230 (looking at you, Ted Cruz), there are approximately 0.0000001 Danielle Citrons, i.e. folks who actually understand it, what it does, and how it might be tweaked or interpreted to do better. Luckily, we have a whole Professor Danielle Citron on this week’s show. Professor Citron not only manages to make sense of Section 230 for us, she also takes us through this week's internet cases involving Twitter and Google, and content moderation and liability. She explains how eight out of nine justices apparently failed to read the briefs, instead deciding on an "it's so hard" shruggy head-scratch strategy instead. Danielle Citron’s latest book is The Fight for Privacy: Protecting Dignity, Identity, and Love in the Digital Age.

In this week’s Amicus Plus segment, Dahlia is joined by Slate’s Mark Joseph Stern to look ahead to next week’s arguments about the Biden administration’s student debt forgiveness program, and to romp through some of the decisions that came down from the Supreme Court this week. Finally, Mark and Dahlia reflect on the results of the primaries in the race to elect a new Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice. Could it be a Mark and Dahlia Amicus plus segment that is not all bad news? 

Sign up for Slate Plus now to listen and support our show. 

Dahlia’s book Lady Justice: Women, the Law and the Battle to Save America, is also available as an audiobook, and Amicus listeners can get a 25 percent discount by entering the code “AMICUS” at checkout.

Need to set up your Slate Plus feed? If you subscribed through Slate.com, check out our FAQ at slate.com/podcastfaqs for easy instructions. Members subscribed via Apple Podcasts get automatic access—no setup required.


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I mean, we're a court. We really don't know about these things. You know, these are not

0:09.5

like the nine greatest experts on the internet.

0:16.6

Hi and welcome back to Amicus. This is Slates podcast on the courts and the law and the Supreme

0:23.3

Court. I am Dahlia Lithwick. I cover those things for Slates. And this week, the high court

0:29.3

decided to take the internet out for a spin. And the court came back, um, confused.

0:36.1

Regulating free speech on the internet turns out to be kind of hard, especially for a court

0:41.4

that hasn't really thought very much about this issue, um, ever. So joining us today to talk

0:48.8

about some cases that could literally strip internet publishing right down to the studs

0:54.1

is the wonderful Professor Danielle Citron, who is going to help us and the justices I hope.

1:00.8

Know what we don't know when it comes to, oh, little things like content moderation and

1:05.9

search algorithms and theories of causation. Happily, Professor Citron has been thinking

1:12.6

about these issues for a really long time. Later on in the show, Slate Plus members are

1:18.4

going to get to hear Mark Joseph Stern as he pops in to discuss some of the first decisions

1:22.9

of the term, which came down this past week as well as the fate of President Joe Biden's

1:29.5

$400 billion student debt relief program, which will be heard by the court next week.

1:35.9

That conversation with Mark can only be accessed by Slate Plus members. So if you'd like to join us

1:42.4

and have access to bonus segment from lots of your very favorite Slate shows,

1:48.1

like Slowburn and Political Gabfest, completely add free episodes of all Slate shows,

1:55.1

and if never ever hitting a paywall for any of Slate's articles sounds kind of good to you,

2:00.2

well, go to slate.com slash amicusplus to sign up. That's slate.com slash amicusplus.

2:09.4

And thank you, really thank you for supporting the work we do here on the show.

2:14.6

But first, the internet. Not really a thing that could be fixed over a few hours in February

...

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