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The justices concluded that kids’ access to online porn is serious enough to change the ground rules of First Amendment law, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Noah Feldman writes.
Attorney General Pam Bondi told the 10 companies they wouldn't incur "any legal liability" for defying the law upheld by the ...
The Supreme Court categorically rejected the argument that the mere regulation of an algorithm raises First Amendment ...
In its nine-month term that began in October, the Supreme Court issued 62 decisions regarding everything from birthright ...
The Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a Massachusetts teacher’s First Amendment challenge concerning her termination ...
The US Supreme Court turned away the case of a Massachusetts teacher fired for controversial social media posts she made ...
President Trump and religious groups emerged as some of the biggest winners from the Supreme Court this term. Losers included ...
The decision clears the way for Attorney General Todd Rokita to proceed with his lawsuits against the popular, short-form ...
The state of Indiana’s lawsuits against TikTok can move forward after the Indiana Supreme Court decided not to take on the ...
Indiana’s highest court weighed allegations of TikTok’s alleged deceptive practices in the Hoosier State, skeptical of ...
Attorney General Todd Rokita will have a chance to prove his claims that the TikTok online video-sharing app runs afoul of ...
Brazil’s Supreme Court agreed on Thursday on details of a decision to hold social media companies liable for what their users ...