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NetChoice Sues To Block Maryland's Kids Code, Saying It Violates the First Amendment
lundi 3 février 2025, 22:00 , par Slashdot
A similar provision in Maryland's law is at the center of NetChoice's complaint. The group says that Maryland's reporting requirement lets regulators subjectively determine the 'best interests of children,' inviting 'discriminatory enforcement.' The reporting requirement on tech companies essentially mandates them 'to disparage their services and opine on far-ranging and ill-defined harms that could purportedly arise from their services' 'design' and use of information,' NetChoice alleges. NetChoice points out that both California and Maryland have passed separate online privacy laws, which NetChoice Litigation Center director Chris Marchese says shows that 'lawmakers know how to write laws to protect online privacy when what they want to do is protect online privacy.' Supporters of the Maryland law say legislators learned from California's challenges and 'optimized' their law to avoid questions about speech, according to Tech Policy Press. In a blog analyzing Maryland's approach, Future of Privacy Forum points out that the state made some significant changes from California's version -- such as avoiding an 'express obligationâ to determine users' ages and defining the 'best interests of children.' The NetChoice challenge will test how well those changes can hold up to First Amendment scrutiny. NetChoice has consistently maintained that even well-intentioned attempts to protect kids online are likely to backfire. Though the Maryland law does not explicitly require the use of specific age verification tools, Marchese says it essentially leaves tech platforms with a no-win decision: collect more data on users to determine their ages and create varied user experiences or cater to the lowest common denominator and self-censor lawful content that might be considered inappropriate for its youngest users. And similar to its arguments in other cases, Marchese worries that collecting more data to identify users as minors could create a 'honey pot' of kids' information, creating a different problem in attempting to solve another. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://yro.slashdot.org/story/25/02/03/2028246/netchoice-sues-to-block-marylands-kids-code-saying-i...
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mar. 4 févr. - 11:55 CET
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