Golf fan has opinions on America’s First Amendment and Section 230
A Florida man held a press conference at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Wednesday to announce the filing of lawsuits against Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, and corresponding executives Mark Zuckerberg, Jack Dorsey, and Sundar Pichai – who runs YouTube’s parent company. The former political office holder, known among other things for a cancelled reality TV series, a discontinued steak business, a failed casino, and a shuttered business training school, accused the social networks of violating the First Amendment of the US Constitution by closing his accounts and deplatforming him. Booted from the aforementioned internet services for statements deemed to have encouraged or incited the storming of the US Capitol by tooled-up tourists, the plaintiff is also seeking to have the courts declare Section 230 of America’s Communications Decency Act unconstitutional. First Amendment scholars were quick to ridicule the complaints. In an effort to overcome that legal obstacle, the man’s complaint against Facebook [ PDF] asserts that the internet ad giant’s status «rises beyond that of a private company to that of a state actor.