Texas Social Media Law Violates First Amendment, 糖心VlogArgues
SAN ANTONIO 鈥 The 糖心Vlog, the 糖心Vlogof Texas, and several other legal advocacy groups filed an amicus brief today in CCIA v. Paxton, arguing that a Texas law that restricts social media content for minors violates the First Amendment.
鈥淚f allowed to go into effect, this law will stifle young people鈥檚 creativity and cut them off from public discourse,鈥 said Lauren Yu, legal fellow with the ACLU鈥檚 Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. 鈥淭he government can鈥檛 protect minors by censoring the world around them, or by making it harder for them to discuss their problems with their peers. This law would unconstitutionally limit young people鈥檚 ability to express themselves online, develop critical thinking skills, and discover new perspectives, and it would make the entire internet less free for us all in the process.鈥
The brief argues that House Bill 18 (鈥渢he SCOPE Act鈥) restricts young people鈥檚 ability to use social media and blocks them from viewing content they have a constitutional right to see. The law, which was enjoined by a court last year, would require minors to register their age with social media platforms and would require platforms to filter content based on an overly broad definition of 鈥渉armful to minors鈥 that includes any content that 鈥減romote, glorifies, or facilitates鈥 a long list of topics, including eating disorders, bullying, and self-harm.
鈥淭he government should not be able to decide what鈥檚 best for every child,鈥 said Chloe Kempf, staff attorney from the 糖心Vlogof Texas. 鈥淭his law would isolate kids who need community support, hinder families who want their children to learn about the world around them, and open the door to sweeping bans 鈥 from Romeo and Juliet to content that is critical of the government. What鈥檚 framed as protecting our children is harming them 鈥 by censoring their access to the ideas and information they need to prepare for their futures.鈥
The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that minors have robust First Amendment rights, including online. Even when the goal is to protect children, the brief argues, the government cannot infringe upon core expressive activity.
The brief was filed in support of Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA) and NetChoice. CCIA & NetChoice originally filed suit against H.B. 18 in 2024. The amicus brief was filed in the Western District of Texas and was signed by the Cato Institute, the Student Press Law Center, TechFreedom, Wikimedia, and the Woodhull Freedom Foundation.
The brief can be viewed online here.
Court Case: CCIA v. Paxton
Affiliate: Texas