Court eases curbs on Biden administration’s contacts with social media firms

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On Friday (September 8), a federal appeals court in the United States relaxed restrictions on the Joe Biden administration’s connections with social media businesses. According to Reuters, the court ruled that the White House, the FBI, and top health officials may not “coerce or significantly encourage” social media companies to remove content that the Biden administration considers misinformation, including about the coronavirus pandemic.

However, a panel of the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals limited most of a Louisiana judge’s injunction that barred the administration from interacting with such corporations.

The injunction has been put on hold for ten days so that the Biden administration can seek Supreme Court review. The government claimed that while it encouraged social media companies to remove posts it deemed damaging misinformation, it never forced them to do so.

According to the report, the lower court judge discovered that American officials improperly compelled Meta Platforms’ Facebook, Alphabet’s YouTube, and X (previously known as Twitter) into suppressing Covid and election fraud-related tweets.

The appeals court panel said on Friday that, while officials had an interest in communicating with social media companies about misinformation, the government was not authorized to further these interests to the point of suppressing viewpoints.

The court also stated that the limited injunction would continue to apply to the White House, the Surgeon General, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the FBI, but would no longer apply to other government officials who were previously covered by the lower court decision.

“Social media platforms’ content-moderation decisions must be theirs and theirs alone,” the court noted, and officials at those agencies were forbidden from coercing or significantly urging social media businesses to remove content.

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