A Texas Law that Limits Censorship on Social Sites is Headed to the Supreme Court

On Wednesday, a federal court of appeals put a temporary hold on the execution of a Texan law that limits the authority of social media platforms to filter user material, awaiting consideration by the Supreme Court of the United States.

The mandate that was issued last month by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which upheld the rule that restricts the capacity of Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to censor material on their platforms, was delayed by the order that was made on Wednesday by the court.

The suppression of free speech or other types of involvement with digital representation, such as the expression on social media networks or via electronic mail messages, was the subject of Texas House Bill 20 (HB 20), which was approved on September 9, 2021, and was scheduled to go into effect on December 2, 2021. HB 20 was referred to as “the censorship of or other types of interference with digital expression.”

As per Politico, HB 20 “would allow both of the Texas state or individual Texans to sue a company if they ‘censor’ an ordinary person centered on their views or their geographical area by trying to ban them or blocking, removing, or otherwise prejudiced against their posts.” This would be the case if the company “censors” an individual by banning them and blocking, removing, or otherwise differentiating against their posts.

According to a report that was published by CNN on Wednesday, “HB 20 intends to expose social media companies including Meta, YouTube, and Twitter to new private civil suits, along with suits by the state’s attorney general, over the companies’ decisions to remove as well as reduce the exposure of user content they consider objectionable.” [CNN] “HB 20 intends to reveal social media sites including Meta, YouTube, and Twitter to privately run lawsuits, as well as suits by the

The term “censorship” would refer to the act of censoring, deleting, or demonetizing material on social media platforms that have at least Fifty million active users. The legislation would apply to these sites.

Tech companies contested HB 20 on the basis that it infringes their right to regulate the speech that shows up on their platforms and further argued that “the law would help stop them from trying to remove hate speech, diplomatic disinformation, violent videos, or other harmful content.” These arguments were based on the First Amendment.

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