
The injunction was slightly modified on October 3, 2023 by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit such that the injunction provided that certain federal officials (1) could not “coerce” social media platforms to make “content moderation decisions” and (2) not meaningfully control social media platforms’ “content-moderation efforts.”
The government filed an emergency application to the Supreme Court of the United States to stay the effect of the injunction pending certiorari and, on October 20, 2023, in a 6-3 decision (with Justices Alito, Thomas and Gorsuch dissenting), the Supreme Court granted the stay and treated the stay application as a petition for certiorari. The Court’s decision specifies that the stay would terminate upon “the sending down of the judgment of this Court.”
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For any question relating to this article, please contact Robert B. Nussbaum, Esq. at Saiber LLC.
Rob Nussbaum has lectured numerous times on legal issues and social media and how social media and other electronic evidence may be admitted into evidence at trial. He concentrates his practice in general commercial litigation and appears regularly in New Jersey federal and state courts.
For any questions relating to whether your website or social media presence can be used against you as a basis for personal jurisdiction, please contact Robert B. Nussbaum, Esq. at Saiber LLC.