Florida reacts to social media Trump ban
Florida on Monday, May 24 became the first US state to regulate how social networks moderate online speech, though more than a hundred similar bills have been filed across the US this year, and the law will almost certainly face a constitutional challenge.
In what the New York Times calls a “direct response” to Facebook and Twitter suspending then-President Trump from their platforms, Florida adopted a law that allows social media companies to be fined for taking such action, the law, which Gov. Ron DeSantis signed, bars the companies from suspending political candidates for more than 14 days as elections loom, the Washington Post reports. If a social network does so, it will be fined $250,000 per day if the candidate is running for statewide office or $25,000 for local offices. The law also prohibits the companies from stopping media outlets from posting to their platforms based on the content of the outlets’ articles or limiting the reach of those articles
“If Big Tech censors enforce rules inconsistently, to discriminate in favor of the dominant Silicon Valley ideology, they will now be held accountable,” DeSantis says in a statement. The law takes effect July 1, CNET reports