Several lawsuits impacting freedom of speech
First we have Missouri v. Biden, which involves the government’s right to threaten companies such as Facebook if they don’t block information the government doesn’t like. The ruling is actually pretty narrow:
Various federal agencies and the White House directed social media companies to censor viewpoints that conflicted with the government’s preferred policies and messaging on topics ranging from covid policy and election integrity to gender ideology and foreign policy. These egregious First Amendment violations silenced not only the plaintiffs in our case but tends of thousands of other Americans. …
…[T]he government cannot take actions, formal or informal, correctly or indirectly – except as authorized by law – to threaten Social-Media Companies with some form of punishment (i.e., an adverse legal, regulatory, or economic government sanction) unless they remove, delete, suppress, or reduce, including through altering their algorithms, posted social-media content containing protected free speech. …
This prohibition does not extend to providing Social-Media Companies with information that the companies are free to use as they wish. Nor does it extend to statements by government officials that posts on Social Media Companies’ are inaccurate, wrong, or contrary to the Administration’s views, unless those statements are otherwise coupled with a threat of punishment within the meaning of the above provision.
In other words, government can comment on the speech of others on social media but can’t threaten the companies if they don’t actively suppress the speech in question. The ruling only gives this relief to the plaintiffs in this particular case, but it sets a precedent.
But the damage is done, and the damage is considerable. It very much helped elect Joe Biden, for example. It sowed much distrust of the government, and that has encouraged many people to believe the government always lies, and to place more stock than ever in wild and destructive conspiracies (more about that in another post).
Also, it ignores the fact that, even without direct threats to such companies, when the federal government tells companies that something they’re allowing to be published is wrong, the company could assume that allowing it to be aired on their platforms would incur some sort of government retribution even without a direct threat being issued by the government.
But it’s still a victory.
Then there is the recent California case in which YouTube and Facebook were sued for fostering social media addiction in vulnerable children:
The jury awarded $3 million to the plaintiff, a young woman identified as KGM, and her mother, according to NPR, which noted Facebook parent company Meta would be responsible for about 70% of that amount and that the companies could face future penalties as well. The family had accused the platforms of willfully making their products addictive and targeting teens, despite internal research showing it could damage their mental health.
The Los Angeles Superior Court decision is among the first in a wave of hundreds of suits by schools, attorneys general, and others, making personal injury claims about major tech companies’ alleged recklessness.
A New Mexico jury recently found Meta liable on similar claims and the company was ordered to pay $375 million in damages. Meta said it would appeal that decision. Meanwhile, a case is also ongoing in a federal court based in California.
“We disagree with the verdict and plan to appeal,” José Castañeda, a Google spokesperson, said in a statement. “This case misunderstands YouTube, which is a responsibly built streaming platform, not a social media site.”
It is no accident that the case involve minors. The law has traditionally allowed more restrictions regarding content or practices aimed at them. The idea is that the companies purposely tried to get kids addicted and that it harms their mental health and that the companies knew this.
I have some trouble with these rulings. I think that the “addiction” model is being overused, although maybe I’m just quibbling here. But I think there is no doubt that YouTube is habit-forming (I can attest to that from personal experience as an adult) and that much of the content is harmful. And I would very much like to protect children. But what is the remedy? Isn’t it parental control? But is parental control totally possible, because even if parents block a child’s access, doesn’t the child probably have access through friends’ devices?

“In other words, government can comment on the speech of others on social media but can’t threaten the companies if they don’t actively suppress the speech in question.”
Upon what basis might we expect another leftist administration to obey that ruling? Absent an independent enforcement mechanism, expecting ideological criminals to respect a judicial ruling is at best self-delusion.
I recall the Disneyland TV series in 1954-55, hosted by Walt himself, that featured Frontierland, Adventureland, Fantasyland, and my favorite, Tomorrowland. I eagerly awaited every weekly broadcast. My mom whole-heartedly approved. Was I “addicted”?
Regarding the evaluation of whether a program “harms children’s mental health,” we should consider what the woke leftists would ban as being “harmful.”
Sadly, any power to ban the bad stuff slopes into banning the true stuff that is negative to the govt.
However, some liability for deliberate addiction thru the algorithm seems an inevitable part of the process. There is harm to many kids, the big companies know it and deliberately increase it.
Just as every age limit is arbitrary, some 22 year olds are too youngly irresponsible to drink, many 19 year olds are plenty responsible; some daily total time limits & continuous time limits, enforced by the content/add providers, seems likely. With possible parental explicit opt-out control options. Likely also requiring parents to sign monthly records of media use.
Laws are needed so that no parent is bombarded with “but the Jones’ kids can”. Parents need to be able to say, but it’s against the law, and bad for you, so NO, you candor more now. A legal norm is much easier for any parent to enforce, of course not perfectly.
They should also say—go read a book, but so few can lead by example it’s almost silly to mention it.
If Republicans don’t address this medium problem, the Dems will do with one or more worse ideas and mor power for the govt to more easily abuse.