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The Lawfare Podcast

The Platforms versus Texas in the Supreme Court

The Lawfare Podcast

The Lawfare Institute

Military, Intelligence, International Law, Constitutional Law, Rule Of Law, Politics, International Relations, News, Government, History, Diplomacy, Terrorism, National Security, Current Events, Law, Foreign Policy

4.7 • 6.2K Ratings

🗓️ 19 May 2022

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On May 12, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit allowed an aggressive new Texas law regulating social media to go into effect. The law, known as HB20, seeks to restrict large social media platforms from taking down content on the basis of viewpoint—effectively restricting companies from engaging in a great deal of the content moderation that they currently perform. It also imposes a range of transparency and due process requirements on platforms with respect to their content moderation. A group of technology companies challenging the law have filed an emergency application to the Supreme Court seeking to put HB20 back on hold while they continue to litigate the law’s constitutionality under the First Amendment. 

This week on Arbiters of Truth, our series on the online information ecosystem, Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic spoke with Alex Abdo, litigation director at the Knight First Amendment Institute, and Scott Wilkens, senior staff attorney at Knight. The Institute, where Evelyn is a senior research fellow, filed an amicus brief in the Fifth Circuit, taking a middle ground between Texas—which argues that the First Amendment poses no bar to HB20—and the plaintiffs—who argue that the First Amendment prohibits this regulation and many other types of social media regulation besides. So what does the Texas law actually do? Where does the litigation stand—and what will the impact of the Fifth Circuit’s ruling be? And how does the Knight First Amendment Institute interpret, well, the First Amendment?

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Transcript

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0:00.0

The following podcast contains advertising to access an ad-free version of the LawFair

0:07.2

podcast become a material supporter of LawFair at patreon.com slash LawFair.

0:14.7

That's patreon.com slash LawFair.

0:18.4

Also check out LawFair's other podcast offerings, rational security, chatter, LawFair no bull,

0:27.3

and the aftermath.

0:57.3

Don't miss Youngblood Live.

1:04.3

There are significant challenges here, four courts and for legislatures to really understand

1:15.1

the technology and then make their decisions, craft laws based on that sophisticated

1:21.7

understanding.

1:22.7

I'm Quinted Jurassic and this is the LawFair podcast May 19th, 2022.

1:30.7

Today we're bringing you another episode of our Arbiters of Truth series on the online

1:34.4

information ecosystem.

1:36.4

On May 12th, the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit allowed an aggressive new Texas

1:41.7

Law regulating social media to go into effect.

1:45.4

The Law, known as HB20, seeks to restrict large social media platforms from taking down

1:51.0

content on the basis of viewpoint, effectively restricting companies from engaging in a great

1:56.7

deal of the content moderation that they currently perform.

2:00.2

The Law also imposes a range of transparency and due process requirements on platforms

2:04.9

with respect to their content moderation.

2:07.3

A group of technology companies challenging the Law have filed an emergency application

2:11.8

to the Supreme Court seeking to put HB20 back on hold while they continue to litigate

2:16.8

the Law's constitutionality under the First Amendment.

...

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