US Supreme Court to Decide If Public Officials Can Block Critics on Social Media

US Supreme Court to Decide If Public Officials Can Block Critics on Social Media

The U.S. Supreme Court, exploring free speech rights in the social media era, on Monday agreed to consider whether the Constitution’s First Amendment bars government officials from blocking their critics on platforms like Facebook and Twitter.

The justices took up an appeal by two members of a public school board from the city of Poway in Southern California of a lower court’s ruling in favor of school parents who sued after being blocked from Facebook pages and a Twitter account maintained by the officials.

 

US Supreme Court to Decide If Public Officials Can Block Critics on Social Media

US Supreme Court to Decide If Public Officials Can Block Critics on Social Media

Taliban Control Creates New Regional Risk

Now that the Taliban have taken over Afghanistan the balance…
US Supreme Court to Decide If Public Officials Can Block Critics on Social Media

Taiwan Fears Becoming the Next Chess Piece That the U.S. Will Cast Away Following Vietnam, Afghanistan

The pullout of the U.S. personnel from Afghanistan in military…
US Supreme Court to Decide If Public Officials Can Block Critics on Social Media

How Big Tech Targets Faith Groups for Censorship

Most people click “accept” on tech companies’ user agreements…