蜜桃直播

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New York flouts court order by demanding social media platforms censor users over Israel-Hamas war

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  • New York Attorney General Letitia James demands social media platforms censor content related to the Israel-Hamas war that 鈥渕ay incite violence.鈥
  • The AG鈥檚 letter violates the First Amendment and federal court orders blocking enforcement of New York鈥檚 Online Hate Speech law.
  • FIRE pushes back: 鈥淏y requiring citizens to police each other鈥檚 speech, New York threatens expression protected by the First Amendment.鈥 

NEW YORK, N.Y., Oct. 19, 2023 鈥 Ten months after the 蜜桃直播 sued New York Attorney General Letitia James, she is once more violating the First Amendment by pressuring private companies to act as government proxies for censorship 鈥 and violating court orders to do it.

FIRE is calling on the attorney general to retract an Oct. 12  she sent to social media platforms, demanding they provide information about what they are doing to 鈥渟top the spread of hateful content鈥 related to the Israel-Hamas war and report back to her about their editorial policies and practices.

鈥淪ocial media sites are not government stooges,鈥 said 蜜桃直播 attorney Daniel Ortner. 鈥淣o matter how hot-button the issues, requiring private companies to police speech is illegal, and also blatantly violates the court order secured by our recent lawsuit.鈥 

In light of the war between Israel and Hamas, the attorney general sent a letter to six platforms, including Rumble, Google, and Meta (Facebook), demanding that they answer a list of questions about their content-moderation policies and practices. James expressed her concern about posts that 鈥渕ay incite violence against Jewish and Muslim people.鈥

The letter, titled 鈥淩emoving Calls for Violence鈥 asks platforms how they are addressing alleged 鈥渞ecent calls for violence鈥 and tells them to 鈥渄escribe in detail鈥 everything from their existing content-moderation policies, to their process for identifying and blocking problematic posts and banning their authors. The  goes further鈥 demanding that platforms 鈥減rohibit the spread of violent rhetoric鈥 and 鈥渉ateful content,鈥 and vowing to 鈥渉old social media companies accountable.鈥 The deadline for the platforms to respond to this barrage of intrusive questions is Oct. 20.

But longstanding Supreme Court doctrine says that violent speech is protected unless a speaker intends to cause imminent violence and the speech is likely to cause imminent violence鈥搇ike when a speaker works a mob into a frenzy and tells them to go burn down a nearby building. When the government tries to root out 鈥渉ateful鈥 or 鈥渧iolent鈥 speech, it not only violates the First Amendment, but engages in a fool鈥檚 errand.

鈥淏y requiring citizens to police each other鈥檚 speech, New York threatens expression protected by the First Amendment,鈥 said 蜜桃直播 senior attorney Jay Diaz. 鈥淲ould a video created by a pro-Israeli activist calling for bombing Gaza qualify as a 鈥榗all for violence鈥? Is a news report including a quotation from a protestor defending Hamas attacks on the Israeli military equal to inciting violence? The attorney general鈥檚 vague letter fails to address these vital questions.鈥

In sending the letter, the attorney general also did exactly what a federal court told her not to do. Last December, 蜜桃直播 represented Rumble, Locals, and blogger Eugene Volokh in a lawsuit against James over a New York law that forces websites and apps to address 鈥渉ateful鈥 online speech. The  is titled 鈥淪ocial media networks; hateful conduct prohibited,鈥 but it actually targets speech the state doesn鈥檛 like 鈥 even if that speech is fully protected by the First Amendment. 

The law forces internet platforms of all stripes to publish a policy explaining how they will respond to online expression that could 鈥渧ilify, humiliate, or incite violence鈥 based on a protected class, like religion, gender, or race. The law also requires the platforms to create and publish a 鈥渕echanism鈥漟or visitors to complain about 鈥渉ateful鈥 content or comments, and mandates that they answer complaints with a direct response. Refusal to comply could mean investigations from the attorney general鈥檚 office, subpoenas, and daily fines of $1,000 per violation.

FIRE successfully secured a preliminary injunction which forbids the attorney general from enforcing the law 鈥 against Rumble or anyone else. Her Oct. 12 letter violates this injunction by pressuring 蜜桃直播 plaintiff Rumble and others to engage in censorship. 蜜桃直播鈥檚 response demands that she retract the letter by Oct. 20 or face further legal action.

The 蜜桃直播 (蜜桃直播) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought 鈥 the most essential qualities of liberty. 蜜桃直播 educates Americans about the importance of these inalienable rights, promotes a culture of respect for these rights, and provides the means to preserve them.

CONTACT: 

Katie Kortepeter, Communications Campaign Manager, 蜜桃直播: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org

 

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