Tag: protections

  • SCOTUS wary of reining in tech’s legal protections

    SCOTUS wary of reining in tech’s legal protections

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    Both liberal and conservative justices suggested Congress is the best body to amend Section 230, not the courts. Justice Elena Kagan warned it would be best for lawmakers to take a scalpel to the law — whereas the court’s reinterpretation of the statute could upend years of legal precedence and lead to a deluge of lawsuits.

    “We’re a court. We really don’t know about these things. These are not like the nine greatest experts on the internet,” Kagan said, prompting laughter from across the courtroom and the bench.

    Even Justice Clarence Thomas — who for years had urged in separate dissents for the court to take up a Section 230 case — seemed unconvinced that algorithms aren’t covered by the liability shield. “I see these as suggestions and not really recommendations, because they don’t really comment on them,” Thomas said of YouTube’s use of algorithms to promote videos.

    Thomas also said he didn’t see the ties between YouTube’s use of algorithms to recommend ISIS videos as a “aiding and abetting” terrorism under the Anti-Terrorism Act when YouTube relies on a neutral algorithm to recommend content.

    “I’m trying to get you to explain to us how something that is standard on YouTube for virtually anything that you have an interest in suddenly amounts to aiding and abetting because you’re in the ISIS category,” the conservative justice said.

    Kagan, an appointee of President Barack Obama, said she didn’t have to accept the tech industry’s “sky is falling” arguments to accept that “there is uncertainty about going the way [the plaintiff] would have us go, in part just because of the difficulty of drawing lines in this area.”

    “Once we go with you, all of a sudden, we’re finding that Google isn’t protected, and maybe Congress should want that system. But isn’t that something for Congress to decide, not the court?” she said to Eric Schnapper, a University of Washington law professor representing the Gonzalez family.

    Similarly, Justice Brett Kavanaugh brought up the concerns raised by many tech companies in their amicus briefs that a completely different interpretation could “really crash the digital economy.”

    “Those are serious concerns and concerns that Congress — if it were to take a look at this and try to fashion something along the lines of what [the plaintiff] is saying could account for — we are not equipped to account for that,” the conservative justice said.

    Despite expectations that the conservative justices would aggressively challenge Google’s claim for far-ranging legal immunity, the most hostile and outspoken voice Tuesday against the firm and the tech industry’s broader arguments was Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who’s emerging as one of the high court’s most liberal members.

    Jackson, the court’s only justice appointed by President Joe Biden, repeatedly argued that tech companies’ protection from liability should be limited to the actual hosting and transmission of user-created content, with all decisions about how to organize, rank and display that content subject to potential litigation under ordinary legal standards.

    Jackson said the broad protection Google was claiming “seems to bear no relationship to the text of the statute.” She insisted the primary purpose of the law was to encourage policing of “offensive” content and that the result the tech firms were seeking would have the perverse effect of immunizing companies when they deliberately amplify inflammatory videos or other posts.

    “What the people who were crafting this statute were worried about was filth on the internet,” said Jackson. “That seems to me to be a very narrow scope of immunity that doesn’t cover whether you were making recommendations or promoting it. … How is that even conceptually consistent with what it looks as though this statute was about?”

    Google’s lawyer, Lisa Blatt of Williams & Connolly, said the law had dual purposes and one key part was to promote robust debate in a critical field of emerging technology.

    “This is about diversity of viewpoints, jumpstarting an industry having information flourishing on the internet and free speech,” Blatt said.

    Even Justice Samuel Alito, who has appeared skeptical of protections for tech firms in other contexts, said he was baffled by the argument made by Schnapper that Section 230 gives immunity for hosting others’ content and for search engine activities, but not for implicit or explicit recommendations.

    “I don’t know where you’re drawing the line. That’s the problem,” Alito said.

    How the Supreme Court rules in Gonzalez could also relate to its conclusions about a similar tech case scheduled for arguments Wednesday — Twitter v. Taamneh. That case asks whether Twitter, Google and Facebook can be held liable under the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act for allegedly aiding and abetting terrorists by sharing ISIS recruitment content.

    The decision in Tuesday’s case could also tee up the justices for a potential ruling in two other cases the court punted to next term involving GOP-backed laws from Texas and Florida that ban platforms from removing users’ viewpoints and deplatforming candidates. The companies contend that the laws violate their free speech rights.

    The pair of tech-related disputes being argued this week are the first closely-watched cases the justices have taken up this year, after hearing attention-grabbing cases last fall about redistricting procedures and the power of state legislatures over Congressional elections. Next week, the high court is to take up one of the cases of most intense interest to the Biden administration: the president’s controversial plan to forgive the college debt of many students.

    So far, the court has issued only one substantive opinion, a unanimous ruling in an obscure case. Rulings in all the cases argued this term are expected between March and June.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • White House prepares new tenant protections, alarming housing industry

    White House prepares new tenant protections, alarming housing industry

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    The industry is bracing for “some pretty intense regulation,” said Jerry Howard, CEO of the National Association of Home Builders, whose members include landlords. “They need to be very cautious about what they’re doing,” said Howard, who was one of a handful of industry representatives at a November White House meeting on tenant protections. “There’s a real chance of creating a problem that doesn’t exist.”

    With a possible recession looming, the Biden administration will be looking for ways to provide relief to cash-strapped Americans suffering from a higher cost of living. Since the U.S. House is now under Republican control, the kind of sweeping economic legislation enacted during the last two years is off the table.

    Democratic lawmakers including Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), are leaning on the administration to go big by curbing rent increases at millions of units in properties with government-backed mortgages – a long-shot move the White House is not seriously weighing, according to a person with knowledge of the discussions.

    “People can’t afford to live,” said Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), who spearheaded a letter last week with Warren calling on President Joe Biden to issue an executive action limiting rent hikes in properties backed by the Department of Housing and Urban Development or Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled mortgage financiers. “We want to push the president as far as possible to lighten the burden of rent on everyday people.”

    Democrats want the administration to enact new restrictions on rent hikes and punish landlords they accuse of price-gouging — “not just principles, not just guidelines, but what can the president do through executive action to lighten the burden on people and put more money in their pockets,” Bowman said in an interview.

    The White House declined to comment on the specifics of potential new regulations, pointing to a statement it released last week in response to the letter from Democrats.

    “We are exploring a broad set of administrative actions that further our commitment to ensuring a fair and affordable market for renters across the nation,” spokesperson Robyn Patterson said. “We look forward to continuing to work with lawmakers to strengthen tenant protections and improve rental affordability.”

    While rent is still driving up overall inflation — thanks in part to a data lag in the official inflation gauge — the national median rent has fallen for four straight months, according to the latest data from Apartment List. New lease demand plummeted in the second half of 2022, when the net demand for apartments fell into negative territory for the first time since 2009, according to an analysis by RealPage Market Analytics.

    “Complicating this process isn’t good at any time in the market cycle,” said Greg Brown, senior vice president of government affairs at the National Apartment Association. “But we’re in the fourth straight month of rent declines. I think things are adjusting again, so it does raise the question, are they responding to a situation of three to four months ago, not what is currently happening or will be happening in the near future?”

    The association and 10 other industry groups urged Biden to resist pressure to lay new federal requirements on top of existing regulations and said that doing so would “further exacerbate affordability challenges,” in a letter last month.

    Even as demand eases, the market is about to see a surge in supply – portending additional price cuts. More apartment units are currently under construction than at any point since 1970.

    “A lot of rental supply is going to be completing in 2023 — we’re going to see more completions than we have in 40-plus years,” said Jay Parsons, chief economist at RealPage, a property management software provider. “The balance of power really has shifted toward renters — they’re going to have more options, more competitive pricing and better deals.”

    Bowman and tenant advocates argue that modest declines in rents – the national median fell 0.8 percent in December – barely make a dent in tenants’ expenses after the eye-popping gains of the last few years.

    Even after falling from its July peak, the median asking price in November was still 20.9 percent higher than it was at the same time in 2019, before the pandemic struck, according to the latest monthly rent report from Realtor.com. About 53 percent of tenants said their rent had increased by more than $100 per month over the last year, according to the latest Household Pulse survey by the Census Bureau.

    Rent was increasing even before Covid, Bowman said, adding that many of his constituents spend over half their income on housing.

    “The cooling effect in the market isn’t meaningfully changing conditions for tenants,” said Tara Raghuveer, director of the Homes Guarantee campaign at People’s Action. Raghuveer also attended the November White House meeting.

    “The rent is still too damn high,” she said.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )