Big Tech hits back at Florida social media law

Big Tech: Twitter, Google, Facebook
Big Tech: Twitter, Google, Facebook
Ascannio via Shutterstock

Two tech industry trade groups representing Twitter, Facebook, and other companies have filed a lawsuit against a Florida law regulating social media platforms.

Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed SB 7072 on May 24, prohibiting social media companies from deplatforming Florida’s political candidates or otherwise restricting their posts. Social media companies can face fines of $250,000 per day for removing a candidate for statewide office for longer than two weeks. The law also provides a means to place companies found to have violated antitrust law on a blacklist, preventing them from contracting with public entities.

DeSantis and supporters of the law say it addresses company content moderators’ alleged bias against conservatives.

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“Many in our state have experienced censorship and other tyrannical behavior firsthand in Cuba and Venezuela,” DeSantis said. “If Big Tech censors enforce rules inconsistently, to discriminate in favor of the dominant Silicon Valley ideology, they will now be held accountable.”

NetChoice and the Computer and Communications Industry Association contend that the restrictions violate the companies’ First Amendment rights. The lawsuit argues the legislation will backfire, preventing platforms from taking down bad actors and removing incendiary content.

It also highlights a notable exclusion from the rules: The Walt Disney Company and other large theme park companies operating in the state.

Some have argued that the federal or state governments could sidestep constitutional concerns by treating companies like Facebook and Twitter as the new public town square, more comparable to public utilities than private companies. That could allow the government to regulate these companies. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas floated that theory in a recent opinion.

Others point to long-established legal precedent protecting the rights of private companies, large and small. “Whether we’re talking about newspapers, cake-makers, or T-shirt shops, America has a lengthy history of court cases forbidding DeSantis from doing what he’s attempting to do,” wrote Scott Shackford, editor of the libertarian Reason.

This story originally appeared in WORLD. © 2021, reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.

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