Possibly the first of many.
could result in a fundamental change to how platforms can recommend content, particularly material produced by terrorist organizations. Both stem from lawsuits claiming that YouTube, Twitter, and other platforms provided support for Islamic State attacks by failing to remove — and, in some cases, recommending — accounts and posts by terrorists.
Google and Twitter have argued that stripping Section 230 protections for recommendation algorithms would have wide-ranging negative effects on the internet, making it risky for sites to help users find videos, tweets, or users by increasing their visibility. Among other things,could reveal whether the Supreme Court thinks recommendations are simply an extension of user-generated content or whether they constitute separate, unprotected speech by the platform itself.
President Joe Biden’s Justice Department has urged the court to reject at least some of Google’s arguments. The department
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