World

In US Supreme Court, Twitter accused of ‘blindness’ to terror

Judges struggle to determine if social media sites can be held liable for such acts

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 23 Feb 2023 11:00AM

In US Supreme Court, Twitter accused of ‘blindness’ to terror
In a two-hour hearing in the United States Supreme Court yesterday, nine justices heard accusations that Twitter should be on the hook for ‘aiding and abetting’ terrorism by failing to stop content created by extremist groups. – AFP pic, February 23, 2023

WASHINGTON – Twitter was accused in the United States Supreme Court yesterday of closing its eyes to the Islamic State group as judges struggled to determine whether social media sites could be held liable for acts of terror.

In a two-hour hearing, the nine justices of the top US court heard accusations that Twitter should be on the hook for “aiding and abetting” terrorism by failing to stop content created by extremist groups.

“There is an allegation of willful blindness here... you knew that ISIS was using your platform,” said justice Sonia Sotomayor, using an acronym for Islamic State while addressing the lawyer for Twitter, the defendant in the case.

The case was brought by the family of a victim of a 2017 attack by the group, also known by the acronym IS, on an Istanbul nightclub.

The family alleges that Twitter’s failure to take down and stop recommending IS tweets constituted aiding an act of terror.

The hearing came a day after a similar case against YouTube was put to the same nine justices. That case involved a US victim of the 2015 Paris attacks, also claimed by the IS group.

Twitter, backed by a wide swathe of big tech players, insists that the mere fact of being a platform used by tens of millions of users worldwide does not prove “knowing” assistance to a terrorist group.

At the heart of both cases, which should be decided by June 30, is the broad legal immunity conferred to tech platforms through a decades-old law that makes suits on content matters virtually impossible.

Tech companies see the US law, Section 230, as a fundamental text of the internet that helped birth the social media revolution by saving websites from an avalanche of legal proceedings.

The Twitter case would, in theory, depend on the judges rewriting the basis of Section 230, an eventuality that seemed uncertain after the justices on Tuesday expressed some doubts about changing the law.

That unease continued yesterday as justices put a long series of hypothetical situations to lawyers in an effort to establish how liability in terrorism cases could apply to social media platforms.

In 1997, “CNN did an interview of Osama bin Laden, a very famous interview of him. Could under your theory, CNN have been sued for aiding and abetting the September 11 attacks?” asked justice Brett Kavanaugh.

In another question, justice Clarence Thomas asked a lawyer for Twitter if a gun was lent to “a friend who was a mugger, a murderer and a burglar, but other than that he was a good guy... could (that) be aiding and abetting?”

Some justices on Tuesday complained that changes to Section 230 would be more suitably handled by US lawmakers and fretted over the potential of destabilising the economy if they unilaterally modified its provisions.

However, US Congress is deeply divided politically and efforts to retool Section 230’s legal shield have failed to reach a vote. – AFP, February 23, 2023

Related News

Education / 2mth

MOE keeps close watch to ensure students free from terrorism-related activities

Malaysia / 3mth

Six, including three teenagers arrested for alleged involvement in IS group

Malaysia / 4mth

Anwar, Modi condemn all forms of terrorism, call for zero tolerance

Malaysia / 8mth

PDRM Counter Terrorism collected early intelligence on Al-Qaeda 22 months before 9/11 attacks

Opinion / 1y

The Trump dilemma and reclaiming balance: The urgent need for fair global trade

Malaysia / 1y

Restaurant worker charged with being IS member

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates Modi on becoming India's longest-serving elected PM

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

People

Malay kampongs in Bangkok: Echoes of southern heritage in Thailand’s capital

Opinion

Johor MB’s exclusionary rhetoric betrays the people, exposes UMNO’s political hypocrisy

Malaysia

Johor and NS polls first major test of post PAS-Bersatu political order

Malaysia

Claimed installation of 12th N. Sembilan ruler invalid - Pengelola Bijaya Diraja

Malaysia

4WD driver who drove backwards on highway nabbed, positive for drugs (video)

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Seven in ten Malaysian workers earn RM5k or less - economist

You may be interested

World

Malaysia - Japan deepen strategic economic ties with landmark LNG deal and local currency push

World

Thai authorities dismantle Malaysia-linked online piracy network in international raid

World

Xi–Kim summit spotlights closer ties; Silence on nuclear issue signals shift in China’s North Korea policy

World

Trump predicts ‘total victory’ over Iran as fragile Middle East calm emerges

World

Anwar: AI must serve humanity, not replace it

World

Sydney Bondi beach mass shooting suspect faces 19 additional charges as investigation expands

World

UN inquiry accuses Israeli authorities of enabling escalating settler violence in West Bank

World

US strikes Iranian targets after Strait of Hormuz helicopter incident deepens Middle East tensions