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T.C. Sottek

T.C. Sottek

Executive Editor

Executive Editor

    More From T.C. Sottek

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    You wouldn’t download a sheep.

    Twitter’s counsel, Seth Waxman, is up first in oral arguments. If his first performance is a preview of what’s to come, we’re going to hear a lot of weird metaphors about criminal activity. Waxman is clearly angling toward the idea that Twitter had to specifically know what criminals on the platform were going to do to be liable for their actions.

    Justice Thomas and Waxman opened with dueling hypotheticals about respectively giving your friend a gun and breaking a padlock to steal your neighbor’s sheep. Sure.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    Side note: the court jokes about being bad at technology, but its livestream quality isn’t funny.

    It’s entirely fair that the Supreme Court doesn’t want to broadcast video from its hearing room, but the American people deserve a serious upgrade to its audio livestream capabilities. Unless you’re an expert on the court it’s often difficult to tell who is speaking at any given time, because there’s no live transcript or indication of the current speaker.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    Twitter was once “the free speech wing of the free speech party.” Now Elon Musk is in charge.

    Twitter’s moderation practices are a subject of today’s case before the Supreme Court, and things have only gotten sketchier and more chaotic since a new Chief Twit took over the company.

    Musk may have inherited this legal mess when he bought Twitter for $44 billion, but now he literally owns it. It will be interesting to see if the company’s new reputation under Musk will give the plaintiffs an edge in arguments.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    Join us again and listen to the Supreme Court consider the future of the internet.

    The justices will reconvene at 10AM ET and oral arguments will begin shortly after in Twitter v Taamneh. If you need to catch up on the action in Gonzalez v. Google, check out yesterday’s coverage from Adi.

    You can listen along live to today’s arguments here as we post updates throughout the hearing:

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    “You can’t call it neutral once the defendant knows its algorithm is doing it.”

    That’s the last word from the plaintiffs in rebuttal, and it’s a statement worth chewing on. There’s a lot to think about here, but the court is now adjourned until tomorrow’s arguments in Twitter v. Taamneh. Stay tuned for more coverage, and thanks for joining us!

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    “How do you operate a website if you don’t have a homepage?”

    We agree, Google. Check us out on the web: www.theverge.com.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    Google: it’s not helpful when states make their own decisions that affect us.

    This might be too obvious to point out, but national and international internet organizations often say they experience substantial hardship when laws are fragmented. That’s why California and the EU have been so instrumental in leading the way on internet regulation; it can be easier for platform giants to simply harmonize the rules everywhere based on the strictest regulation in one place, rather than forking their platform and policies to comply with a bunch of localities.

    Google and every other big platform does not want to be subject to an even greater patchwork of laws, which could be an outcome of 230 being weakened.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    Google: what do you want on the internet? The Truman Show or a horror show?

    Google has come out swinging, pushing back fiercely against the court for “incorrect” premises in its questioning. One colorful moment that just happened: Blatt offering a hypothetical if 230 gets overturned.

    According to Google, it’s a land of extremes. We’ll either live in The Truman Show, where everyone moderates everything into oblivion, or a horror show, where nobody moderates anything. These are not hyperbolic examples — it’s exactly the question at the heart of 230 protections.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    The court fairly asks Google: whose recommendation is a “recommendation?”

    Google’s attorney Lisa S. Blatt is now up in the final hour of arguments, and she’s already getting some pointed questions — off the bat, who is really responsible for one of YouTube’s recommendations? The court suggests it’s not the user, who merely uploaded content and is not responsible for how the overall system works.

    T.C. Sottek
    T.C. Sottek
    Elon Musk has weirdly created a useful endpoint in an algorithmic spectrum.

    DOJ pointed out during arguments that when a computer is doing things there is “no live human being” making a choice, at least on an individual basis. And that’s true when large teams of people are making distributed and collective decisions.

    In the case of Twitter, however, we now have an example of what happens when one man explicitly turns the knobs in a certain direction.