Elon Musk said he wanted to own and privatize Twitter because he thinks it’s not living up to its potential as a platform for free speech.
Private parties can decide whose speech they want to distribute. That’s a First Amendment right, not a Section 230 right.
"Many people … trust these big tech companies frankly more than they do their politicians," Politico's chief technology correspondent says.
There’s a lot at stake for students, taxpayers and colleges.
SCOTUS says it is unconstitutional to reject trademarks because they use offensive terms like racial slurs.
Twitter's high-profile spat over speech highlights the gap between ideals, reality
Now when you 'like' something on Facebook, you're exercising your First Amendment rights.
A secret meeting, a handful of tech CEO's, and the future of your freedom of speech online.
An Arcata, California ordinance did not allow non-aggressive requests for money, including signs, in many parts of town. But that all changed when a judge ruled the mandate unconstitutional.
Free speech issue comes to Kansas