Technology has come a long way since the Court first struck down age-verification requirements. Age verification services are now effective, easily used, and secure enough to be widely deployed. However the Court rules in this particular case, the era of the online pornography free-for-all seems to be coming to a close.
In Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, the court will hear arguments about whether a law that requires age-verification before accessing sexual speech online is constitutional. We are in court to protect free speech on and offline.
“We’re standing at the crossroads of some pretty significant internet law right now,” says Christopher Terry, associate professor of media law at the University of Minnesota.
The Corporate Transparency Act, which requires businesses to disclose ownership information, was blocked by a federal judge as beyond Congress’s authority.
The Supreme Court’s decision today is a setback for First Amendment rights and the U.S.' role as a defender of the open internet.
The most "relevant" results that come up in a search of "abortion" on HHS.gov, the website for the federal Department of Health and Human Services, are several years old, from the first Trump administration.
Claims that TikTok had been sold circulated after the app went dark in response to a U.S. federal ban, then returned a short time later.
The media brand worked with long-time agency partner Jennifer Bett Communications to recreate the site at ‘lightning speed.’
The Supreme Court of Ghana has unanimously affirmed Agri-Cattle Lakeside Estate Ltd as the rightful owner of 2,911.53 acres of land at Katamanso in the Greater Accra Region. The landmark ruling by ...
When the Supreme Court upheld a law that banned TikTok from the US, it seemed well aware that its ruling could resonate far beyond one app. The justices delivered an unsigned opinion with a quote from Justice Felix Frankfurter from 1944: “in considering the application of established legal rules to the ‘totally new problems’ raised by the airplane and radio,
The U.S. Supreme Court declined on Tuesday to hear Republican former Iowa congressman Steve King's bid to avoid paying a small judgment for having used without permission an internet meme - the "Success Kid" photo of a determined-looking 11-month-old baby at the beach - to promote his 2020 reelection campaign.
By Troy Closson The Supreme Court agreed on Friday to consider a high-profile case that could open the door to allowing public dollars to directly fund religious schools. The widely watched case ...