Under what circumstances can American officials restrict citizens’ access on social media?

Under what circumstances can American officials restrict citizens’ access on social media?



When ⁤can American officials block citizens on social ⁢media?

DONALD⁣ TRUMP repeatedly tested the bounds of America’s Constitution during his four years in the White House. One of his misadventures—blocking critics from viewing or interacting with his posts on⁤ Twitter,​ the site since rebranded as X—led to a federal​ appeals-court ruling that his cold shoulder had violated the ‌First Amendment. But‌ before the Supreme ‌Court could review that decision, Mr Trump lost the 2020 election and Knight Institute v Donald ⁢Trump ⁤became moot.

On October⁣ 31st two cases⁣ not involving the 45th president teed up ​the same question for the justices: when does⁣ an ⁤official’s ⁣use of⁣ a personal social-media account‍ become “state action”‌ and ​thus ⁣subject to constitutional limits?⁣ Three​ hours of debate revealed the difficulty ⁤of distinguishing between personal use of Facebook and posts that are, ⁤in the ⁣terms​ of a precedent from 1982, “fairly attributable to the state”.

In O’Connor-Ratcliff v Garnier, a ⁣couple from Poway, a town near San Diego, sued two trustees of the‌ school board for blocking⁤ them on Facebook and Twitter. The Garniers, who sent their children ⁢to school in the district, had irked the trustees⁣ by writing long,⁣ repetitive comments⁣ on their virtual pages. But ‌they claimed that since the officials’ platforms were ‌a forum ⁢for⁣ community discussion about ⁤school-board activities, their freedom ​of speech was unfairly curtailed when the officials blocked them. In⁣ July​ 2022 a ‍unanimous panel of the Ninth ‍Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, ⁣finding that the trustees had “cloaked” their accounts “with the authority of the state”.

2023-11-01 15:14:10
Article ⁤from www.economist.com
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