On May 1, the US House of Representatives passed the fraudulently titled “Antisemitism Awareness Act of 2023.” It’s not yet law, pending Senate passage and a presidential signature, but the lopsided House vote (320 to 91) should worry all Americans, including the country’s 7.6 million Jews. In theory, the bill merely clarifies how the US More
A Meta Oversight Board member recently confirmed the obvious: Meta might be an American company, but it certainly doesn't prioritize the First Amendment in its policy decisions. Kenji Yoshino, a New York University Constitutional law professor and member of the Meta Oversight Board, asserted that the U.S. Constitution is not the baseline for the tech company’s free speech policies. “Our baseline here is not the US Constitution and free speech, but rather international human rights norms,” he...
A Meta Oversight Board member recently confirmed the obvious: Meta might be an American company, but it certainly doesn't prioritize the First Amendment in its policy decisions. Kenji Yoshino, a New York University Constitutional law professor and member of the Meta Oversight Board, asserted that the U.S. Constitution is not the baseline for the tech company’s free speech policies. “Our baseline here is not the US Constitution and free speech, but rather international human rights norms,” he...
According to a nine-page injunction, Cross was accused of making "untruthful and negative remarks about an employee organization" during an April 20 radio interview with local radio station KVOI.
TikTok is the first social media app to be at risk of being banned in the U.S. as the government fears the app is a national security concern.
May 15 (UPI) — A group of TikTok users sued the U.S. government over a law that would force the platform’s Chinese-based parent company to sell the app to avoid a ban in the United States. Eight content creators on the platform filed the suit alleging the Protecting Americans From Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed into law […] The post TikTok users file First Amendment suit over U.S. divest or ban law first appeared on Gephardt Daily.
Although the creators involved have also used platforms like Facebook and Instagram, the lawsuit highlights their followings on those sites are much smaller.
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter TikTok and its Chinese parent company ByteDance filed a lawsuit against the federal government Tuesday over what it called an “unconstitutional” potential ban in the U.S. of the social media platform.
Eight TikTok creators are suing the U.S. government to block the divest-or-ban law, arguing that it violates the First Amendment.
May 7 (UPI) — The popular social media giant TikTok on Tuesday let it be known that the Chinese-owned company is now taking the U.S. government to federal court to stop enforcement of a recently signed law that effectively would ban the app unless it sells. “For the first time in history, Congress has enacted a […] The post TikTok to sue U.S. over possible First Amendment violation in app’s recent ‘ban’ first appeared on Gephardt Daily.
The Playoffs kicks off and Rayados is going for it all! Monterrey will face
Draft picks Ladd McConkey, Brenden Rice and Cornelius Johnson hit the ground running on the first day of rookie mini-camp.