NetChoice Seeks Injunction Against California's Disastrous Internet Law
The trade association says the overbroad and vague A.B. 2273 places unconstitutional burdens on speech.

NetChoice, a trade association that represents tech firms, has sued to block California's Age-Appropriate Design Code Act (A.B. 2273), the state's hamfisted attempt to protect children online. As NetChoice writes in a request for a preliminary injunction filed last month, the law violates the Constitution by "enact[ing] a system of prior restraint over protected speech using undefined, vague terms, and creat[ing] a regime of proxy censorship, forcing online services to restrict speech in ways the State could never do directly."
The law will require any business (as defined by California statute) offering online services "likely to be accessed by children" to "[e]stimate the age of child users with a reasonable level of certainty appropriate to the risks that arise from the data management practices of the business or apply the privacy and data protections afforded to children to all consumers" (emphasis added). In other words, if a company cannot erect obstacles for children users specifically, it must create obstacles for all users.
Such child-specific protections include pre-configuring settings to maximize privacy and refraining from collecting, maintaining, or selling nonessential data. Moreover, before offering a new online service likely to be accessed by children, businesses must investigate and detail how it could cause children harm. Like many other broad terms, the law leaves "harm" undefined. "[B]ecause it rests on standards and phrases that are impermissibly vague," the law is "invalid," according to NetChoice.
NetChoice posits that A.B. 2273 "places the burden on all online providers to configure their services in a child-friendly way, rather than empower specific households with the controls and information they need to make content and privacy decisions for their children." The association argues that "[s]uch a medium-focused approach is inherently overbroad, particularly given that there are no minors in nearly two-thirds of California households."
Moreover, the plaintiff notes, "Its application to any online feature 'likely' to be accessed by anyone under 18, and its presumption that users are minors unless proven otherwise, mean that virtually all content—including blogs, book groups, and encyclopedias used mostly by and intended for adults—is subject to the law."
The law will require that businesses strictly adhere to their stated content-moderation policies, which, by nixing discretionary enforcement, amounts to "proxy censorship." This provision "forces services to err on the side of caution by blocking content that some (but not others) might consider problematic—such as by enforcing prohibitions on categories like 'hateful,' 'objectionable,' or 'respectful' content," NetChoice argues. Further, by effectively requiring online platforms to impose universal age verification or to subject all users to a sanitized, modified-for-kids version of the internet, the association says the bill impermissibly burdens speech.
The law wilts before the dual prongs of strict scrutiny, a legal test applied often to statutes that implicate fundamental rights such as freedom of speech. First, to prove a compelling government interest, the government must identify concrete harms or risks. California failed to do so, NetChoice contends. "The State must 'prove the existence of a problem' before burdening speech and provide 'a more careful assessment and characterization of an evil' it seeks to avert 'to justify' its 'sweeping' regulation," the filing says. Second, the government must show that the policy is narrowly tailored to achieve its goal. The broad and vague A.B. 2273 manifestly fails here also.
"[S]elf-censorship is AB 2273's self-professed aim: It expressly declares that providers should tailor their online expression to 'the best interests' and 'well-being of children,'" the plaintiffs conclude.
Gov. Gavin Newsom's California—in some ways the blue-tinted mirror image of Ron DeSantis' Florida—seems determined to micromanage the internet to assuage progressives' anxieties. Such interventions in markets and free expression are magnets for unintended consequences and rarely end well.
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Gov. Gavin Newsom's California—in some ways the blue-tinted mirror image of Ron DeSantis' Florida—seems determined to micromanage the internet to assuage progressives' anxieties.
They just cannot help themselves here. The whole article is about Newsom and California until the very tail end when the writer, for some reason, felt the need to throw in DeSantis and Florida. No, McGarry, Florida is in no way a mirror of California, nor is DeSantis a mirror of Newsom.
It's not like every article about DeSantis has an obligatory reference to Newsom, or Biden, or Whitmer, or Polis, or any other politician you might consider some kind of equivalent. But even when the article is barely focused on Newsom at all, they have to drop in a little reference to DeSantis.
Criticism of a Democrat equals praise for Democrats.
Criticism of a Republican equals praise for Democrats.
Criticism of a Democrat paired with criticism of a Republican equals praise for Democrats.
Only criticism of a Democrat paired with praise for a Republican can equal criticism of Democrats, but there better be a lot of praise. I mean pages and pages.
Do you understand my criticism, or do you not? If you don't, I can explain it to you. If you just want to share your pre-rehearsed speaking point, stop replying to my comments with non sequitors.
I get your point, but I think it's a bunch of whining. And it confirms my joke.
By the way, I'm choosing my words carefully to be sure that you know I'm being critical of what you said, not of you as a person.
As opposed to all the comments I never reply to which are critical of me as a person while ignoring what I say.
They’re really shorting Newsom on due credit with that. He wants to micromanage every aspect of the life of every one who’s ever thought about having any direct or indirect interaction with anyone that’s ever physically been within the State of CA, unless they’re not a US Citizen, a woman making “reproductive choices”, or are “experiencing homelessness”. The fact that the most current instance has to do with the internet is coincidental.
The CA Dem party, which faces no meaningful opposition in their attempts at totalitarian rule of the State until they come up against US Federal Courts and Judges who have some regard for having sworn to uphold the U.S. Constitution (which is viewed as an inconvenient distraction in and around Sacramento anymore).
The fact that so many of their major new policies are being blocked in the Courts shouldn’t surprise anyone who’s paid a little attention to what they’re doing. Within the next 2 election cycles, there will probably be a bill passed through the state legislature empowering any elected State Official to order the imprisonment of any person for any action deemed “offensive” by the Official, with the accused being allowed one court appeal in which it’s their responsibility to prove that no actual Offense was taken by the Official making the charge. After that, they'll grant the right of "Prima Nocta" to the Governor and members of the Assembly/Senate in connection with any marriage license issued within their district.
Yeah, even absent the specific politicians, the conflation of Governors and bills and speaking to party there's a metaphoric inversion. California is not a reflection of Florida with just a tincture of blue.
Engagement. You engaged...
Nor does your reality bear any resemblance to actual reality.
DSDS. DeSantis Derangement Syndrome. You never see Reason talk about Newsom. Just Republicans. Fucking leftists.
I knew you'd make this comment. There's been about 40 articles about DeSantis in the past three months. Considering they don't often publish things on weekends or holidays, that's an impressive rate.
Do most of those articles make mention of Newsom in them? But this one, which mentioned Newsom one single time despite being about a law he signed in California, had to throw in an obligatory reference to DeSantis, so that DeSantis' name shows up just as many times as Newsom's.
It's some kind of neurotic compulsion at this point.
In the conclusion they compared two potential presidential candidates.
HOW DARE THEY?!?!?!?!
BTW, you knew it was coming because it's what people really believe.
More critically, it also conflates a bill signed into law by the Governor of California being opposed post facto to...
...a brain fart by a member of Florida's legislature?
...a law having nothing to do with the internet or free speech, but parent's choice?
...broad non-legislative animus against defamation having nothing to do with the internet specifically?
"I don't have to look good *or* even be clear." - Dave McGarry in rebuttal to Don Henley.
Watch the fascist Democrats while they PROJECT everything they are doing onto Republicans.
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I estimate the age of all child users to be 18 to 26 years of age.
Next?
Yeah man ya NAILED that one!
(Fuck vague and worthless laws anyway!)
They checked off the checkbox saying they were 18? What more do you need? This is the internet and these kids aren't trees that we can just saw in half and count the rings.
"[e]stimate the age of child users with a reasonable level of certainty appropriate to the risks that arise from the data management practices of the business"
By, say, requiring the user to input a choice from four possible definitions of a random word within seven seconds.
"or apply the privacy and data protections afforded to children to all consumers"
"Oh, that's easy! We provide *no* privacy and data protections to *any* consumer."
By, say, requiring the user to input a choice from four possible definitions of a random word within seven seconds.
This is so stupid it could only come from legislation. Please tell me this came from legislation. Otherwise, please tell me the name of the tech/security/consulting firm that came up with this so that I can be sure to shame them and disregard all advice from them going forward.
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