Kids Have First Amendment Rights Too, Federal Judge Reminds State Lawmakers
Banning people under age 16 from accessing social media without parental consent "is a breathtakingly blunt instrument" for reducing potential harms, the judge writes.

An Ohio law requiring that people under age 16 get parental permission to use social media is unconstitutional, a federal judge held this week.
On Monday, U.S. Judge Algenon Marbley told Ohio's attorney general not to enforce the law against tech industry group NetChoice or any of its members—a group that includes all sorts of major U.S. tech companies, including Meta, Pinterest, and TikTok. While this week's ruling is just a preliminary injunction, Marbley's opinion leaves little room for doubt that the tech companies will ultimately win here.
Marbley's ruling is the latest in a string of federal court orders against state laws intended to limit minors' social media or require platforms to follow special rules for users under the age of 18. Meanwhile, similar measures are still spreading like a bad viral meme throughout U.S. statehouses.
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Childproofing the Internet
Ohio's "Parental Notification by Social Media Operators" law was passed last summer, following the passage of similar legislation in Utah and Arkansas. It requires many websites and apps to get consent from parents or guardians before allowing anyone under age 16 to sign up. Companies that fail to do this could be sued by the state's attorney general and face fines.
The Ohio law—which was slated to take effect on January 15, 2024—is part of a wave of attempts to childproof the internet through mechanisms like checking IDs for people who want to use social media or visit adult websites, raising the minimum age for opening a social media account, requiring minors to prove they have their parents' consent to use social media, and banning the use of certain social media features for users under a certain age.
Of course, applying specific rules to minors means tech companies must verify the ages and identities of all users. You or I might not need parental permission to use TikTok, but we would need to first prove we are old enough to get around that step.
For a good overview of the issues with online age-check laws, see this series from the R Street Institute's Shoshana Weissmann. She points out myriad downsides and unintended consequences, including the fact that these laws violate privacy, make people vulnerable to hackers and hostile governments, discourage data minimization (even when they sometimes purport to do the opposite), threaten our First Amendment right to anonymity, interfere with parental choice, risk criminalizing kids who try to outsmart them, and sometimes ban features—like algorithms—that actually make platforms more useful and safe.
The NetChoice Lawsuit
"Like other States before it, Ohio has unconstitutionally tried to limit certain minors' access to protected and valuable speech on the Internet," argued NetChoice in a complaint filed in January. The group argues that Ohio's parental consent for social media law is unconstitutional in multiple ways.
The law interferes with minors' right to access and engage in protected speech, it "baldly discriminates among online operators based on the type of speech they publish," and its provisions are also "unconstitutionally vague," NetChoice argued. For these reasons, it violates the First Amendment rights of Ohioans under age 16 and the First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of tech companies.
The law would apply to online entities that allow users to interact socially, construct profiles, and create or post content when such an entity "targets children, or is reasonably anticipated to be accessed by children"—a rather porous category. "Websites have no way to know what this means," NetChoice argued in its complaint.
Further complicating compliance and understanding, Ohio's legislature exempted sites where "interaction between users is limited" to e-commerce reviews or to comments on content "posted by an established and widely recognized media outlet" that primarily reports news and current events.
These parameters mean review forums focused on products for sale online wouldn't have to get parental consent, but platforms dedicated to other types of reviews would. Likewise, "established" or "widely recognized" media focused on news or current events wouldn't have to get parental consent, but newer, lesser known, or mixed-purpose media platforms would. This exception discriminates against non-news content, "such as literature, art, history, or religion," argued NetChoice. "Thus, 15-year-olds must secure parental consent to join web forums devoted to United States history, but not to comment on contemporary news stories."
Ohio Attorney General David Yost argued in response that the law didn't concern speech at all but the right to contract, and that this fell within the state's authority to regulate commercial transactions.
This is a common tactic with authorities when it comes to speech restrictions involving social media or internet platforms. Rather than outright banning speech, they'll put burdensome restrictions on it and then argue that since the law focuses on contracts, or paperwork collection (as in the case of a new federal porn bill), or product design or some such thing, the First Amendment couldn't possibly apply.
No Contract Exception to Free Speech
Judge Marbley does not seem persuaded by Yost's argument. After issuing a temporary restraining order prohibiting enforcement against NetChoice or its member groups back in January, Marbley this week granted NetChoice's motion for a preliminary injunction, extending that temporary block on enforcement as the case plays out.
"The Act regulates speech in multiple ways: (1) it regulates operators' ability to publish and distribute speech to minors and speech by minors; and (2) it regulates minors' ability to both produce speech and receive speech," wrote Marbley, adding that there is no "contract exception" to free speech rights.
"In the State's view, the Act is a regulation striking at the commercial aspect of the relationship between social media platforms and their users, not the speech aspect of the relationship," noted Marbley. "But this Court does not think that a law prohibiting minors from contracting to access to a plethora of protected speech can be reduced to a regulation of commercial conduct." Thus, the judge agreed with NetChoice that the law restricts minors' First Amendment rights.
To come to this determination, Marbley cited a Supreme Court case concerning video games (Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association), in which the justices wrote that even if "the state has the power to enforce parental prohibitions," it didn't follow "that the state has the power to prevent children from hearing or saying anything without their parents' prior consent." Laws that do so do not "enforce parental authority over children's speech and religion; they impose governmental authority, subject only to a parental veto," the justices wrote in that case.
The judge also agreed with NetChoice that the law represents a content-based regulation, which makes it subject to a more strict level of scrutiny than regulations that are not. Interestingly, the judge reached this conclusion in part because the law targets sites with particular functions. "Functionalities allowing users to post, comment, and privately chat—in other words, to connect socially online—may very well be conveying a message about 'the type of community the platform seeks to foster,'" wrote Marbley (citing a case in which NetChoice challenged a Texas social media law). "The features that the Act singles out are inextricable from the content produced by those features" and thus "the Act's distinction on the basis of these functionalities" is content-based.
Subjecting the law to strict scrutiny means that in order for it to be OK, it must further a compelling governmental interest and be narrowly tailored to that end. But while the state says it's out to protect minors from dangerous contracts, "the Act is not narrowly tailored to protect minors against oppressive contracts," wrote Marbley. The judge also rejected the idea that the act is narrowly tailored to other areas that may or may not be considered compelling government interests, such as protecting kids' mental health.
"Foreclosing minors under sixteen from accessing all content on websites that the Act purports to cover, absent affirmative parental consent, is a breathtakingly blunt instrument for reducing social media's harm to children," wrote Marbley. "The approach is an untargeted one, as parents must only give one-time approval for the creation of an account, and parents and platforms are otherwise not required to protect against any of the specific dangers that social media might pose."
Lastly, the court found that the law's provisions are "troublingly vague" with regard to which websites are subject to it. Terms like "reasonably anticipated to be accessed by children," or established" and "widely recognized" media outlets, do not precisely describe whether or not a particular website or media outlet is subject to the law's rules, and "such capacious and subjective language practically invites arbitrary application of the law."
Legislative Contagion
Marbley's recent ruling is the latest blow to the legislative trend of requiring age checks for social media, parental consent for minors to use social media, or other regulations targeting teens and social media use. Some of these decisions have been quite bold in their rebukes, too.
In August, a federal judge held that Arkansas' law to this effect likely violated the First Amendment. "Requiring adult users to produce state-approved documentation to prove their age and/or submit to biometric age-verification testing imposes significant burdens on adult access to constitutionally protected speech," wrote Judge Timothy Brooks in his decision. Furthermore, "a State possesses legitimate power to protect children from harm, but that does not include a free-floating power to restrict the ideas to which children may be exposed. Speech that is neither obscene as to youths nor subject to some other legitimate proscription cannot be suppressed solely to protect the young from ideas or images that a legislative body thinks unsuitable for them."
In September, a federal court in California halted enforcement of the state's "Age-Appropriate Design Code" (CAADCA), in another case where the state tried to argue that the rules didn't regulate speech but conduct—collecting and using data. Among other things, implementation of the code would have required that tech companies use "age estimation" techniques that would be invasive to all users' privacy or else treat all users as children.
Alas, these rulings don't seem to have dampened enthusiasm for this sort of legislation, however. So many states are now considering online age-check proposals that it's hard to keep track of them all.
Some of these—like bills under consideration in Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Tennessee, and West Virginia—would require people to verify their ages before visiting sites featuring adult content such as pornography.
Others would require social media users to verify their ages, ban children from signing up for accounts, require parental consent for people under 18 or 16 years old, or set up specific social media features that couldn't be made available to minors. In the past several months, social media restrictions bills like these have been introduced in Florida, Iowa, New York, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee. Utah, which passed the first of these laws last year and is trying to get out of defending it in court, is also considering a revised version.
The Pennsylvania bill is particularly egregious. It would "require social media companies to monitor the chats of two or more minors on the platform and notify parents or legal guardians of flagged sensitive or graphic content," per a press release from the state's Democratic Caucus.
How many times will tech and civil liberties groups have to fight measures like these in court? I guess we're about to find out.
"This is the fourth ruling NetChoice has obtained, demonstrating that this law and others like it in California and Arkansas not only violate constitutional rights, but if enacted, would fail to achieve the state's goal of protecting kids online," said Chris Marchese, Director of the NetChoice Litigation Center, in an emailed statement. "We look forward to seeing these laws permanently struck down and online speech and privacy fully protected across America."
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do children have an any amendment right to ownership of cellphones?
If they can afford to and choose to purchase one, they have a right to own it. Hell, you can buy a car for your 5 year old, she just doesn't have the right to operate it on publicly-owned roads.
So why is it ok for the state to say the 5 year old can't drive on a public road, but not ok for the state to say the 5 year old can't watch tiktok?
Because
1) Public roads are a limited asset created for use by the public, so you have to follow certain rules to use them, just like it is (theoretically) wrong to shit on the sidewalk.
2) Kids watching TikTok aren't a health hazard to other people like kid drivers are.
We also have laws on the books prohibiting children from smoking. Childhood smoking doesn't cause a health hazard for others and isn't using a public asset, so why is that an acceptable limitation on their rights and a social media ban is not?
Why are people here trying to justify further encroachments? It's bad enough we have the ones we do have. That doesn't mean we need more. We need to stop new ones and work at getting rid of old ones.
Why are certain rights restricted by age? It should be either or. This Judge ruled that minors are covered under the First Amendment, yet their Second Amendment rights are restricted until they reach a certain age. I’m not advocating handing a five year old a loaded gun, but, as far as this Judge is concerned, I should be able to. Look at the Parents who are currently on trial because they bought their 15 year old son a gun that he used in a school shooting. If this Judge’s ruling holds true, why are they on trial? The Mother has been convicted, if I’m her lawyer, I’m bringing this up. Right now the ruling is that the State cannot restrict the viewing of certain websites because it violates a minor’s First Amendment rights. How long until there is a ruling on a Parent or Guardian restricting what a minor views?
With individual rights come individual responsibilities. To the extent that minors are excused from legal responsibility, they are also restricted in what rights they may exercise.
An adult may hand a gun to a minor, but that adult will be motivated to supervise the minor's usage because the adult can be held responsible for any bad outcome.
Can a minor be subject to cruel and unusual punishment for commiting a crime then. If a person is under whatever subjective arbitrary age as defined by the state can they be hung, drawn and quartered, impaled or burned at the stake. If it is all or nothing, I would rather it be allowed for a teenager to have the right to buy and own a weapon for self defence then allow states to subject them to cruel and unusual punishment under the law.
#3 read the contract you are signing next time you get your driver's license renewed. It's also the reason why you are forced to give the police an ID when in a car but you don't have to when you are a pedestrian.
If they can ban drugs without an Amendment and restrict tobacco and alcohol sales by age, they can ban cellphones or anything they want for any stupid reason. The Constitution has long since ceased being an important limit on government.
I don't see the connect between the right to speak which is universal and possession of the vehicle to express the right "on social media" which is not
People don't have a universal right to own a phone, no. If they did we'd have to provide them all with one. But if they want to buy one, why should the government be empowered to stop them?
I'm saying the government is not empowered to stop the kids and shouldn't be ... responsibility is for parents to keep their own kids off social if that's what they want
People don’t have a universal right to own a phone, no. If they did we’d have to provide them all with one.
No - that's a confusion between rights and obligations. The government hasn't the right to stop you getting a phone, but is under no obligation either to provide you with one or compel private companies to. Just as 2A doesn't require the government to furnish you with guns.
No – that’s a confusion between rights and obligations.
Positive rights vs negative rights.
This is more clearly stated as rights to treat everyone as your slave vs rights to not be treated as a slave.
They do indeed have a right to own a phone, if they can buy one.
The difference between a positive right and a negative right is that the positive right (being provided with a good or service such as a phone, or free medical care) requires the rest of us to buy something for them out of money obtained by taxation, whereas the negative right (to own whatever the phone, or whatever gun you can afford to buy) only requires the government to get the hell out of the way.
9th, 10th Amendments?
on siriusxm they'd be Deep Tracks.
Some of the Founders opposed the Bill of Rights. They said that enumerated powers meant rights need not be listed. If they were then those would become the only rights, and instead of enumerated powers there would be powers limited only by those enumerated rights.
Similar thing with the 16th where some wanted to put a cap on income tax, but it was rejected because people thought it would just immediately go to that level. Imagine if there was a 7% limit for income tax rates.
Thus the 9th and 10th amendments.
That's not a reason to let it continue unchallenged.
I guess it's lucky the founders didn't think to specifically mention a right to alcohol or smokes, eh?
Once again, there is a great gap between the first and second amendment.
If they have a 1st Amendment right at that age they have to have a 2nd Amendment right as well, or are we picking and choosing Rights?
The second part. And we're making up new ones all the time.
The Supreme Court has ruled many times that rights are not unlimited and restrictions can be added to ensure the safety of the general population. Giving guns to a child is arguably more dangerous than allowing them to express their freedom of speech.
Parents can still block any websites they don't like. There plenty tools for phones and computers that you can use to choose what children can or cannot do with it. And if you really don't trust your kids that much, don't give them electronics with internet access.
There is an important difference in how the rights are presented. The first is explicitly a prohibition on government passing any laws on particular topics. The second articulates a right of the people. Whether that means there is any practical difference is debatable, but I don't think the choices of phrasing were arbitrary or accidental.
Lets add the eighth amendment in there as well. If minors have no rights against the state under the constitution then they could potencially be impaled or burned at the stake for commiting a crime, right? If it's all or nothing, then I'd say all. If parents don't like it, they can take steps to prevent them from getting it or punish their children for having it. No need for the state to be a surrogate nanny for your children. That is parental laziness.
"Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Tennessee, and West Virginia"
What are . . . seven states at the bottom of the educational attainment rankings but high in uneducated, superstitious, bigoted, economically inadequate, right-wing slack-jaws?
Some of these—like bills under consideration in Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Tennessee, and West Virginia—would require people to verify their ages before visiting sites featuring adult content such as pornography.
The whole sentence pedo.
You must be the MAP that insists children can engage in any behavior they choose and the state will hide it from the parents.
They don’t care. They don’t have to care. They know that they will not be held personally liable for passing blatantly unconstitutional laws. They held their political fingers to the wind, and they believe that the voters will not vote them out of office for costing their constituents millions of tax dollars to fight losing battles in court over popular partisan slogans. Until there is criminal or civil punishment on a personal basis for miscreant officials this egregious behavior will continue. I find the assertion that we will not be able to induce anyone to hold public office in that case to be a GOOD thing, not an argument against …
Yup, and each year more people want less responsibility over their kids. They want someone else to do the hard work.
and each year our Educational System usurps the authority that Parent's have concerning their children. Look at how the Teacher's Unions whined about parents not getting involved in their child's education. As soon as they do and find out what the Unions are pushing, they get labeled as domestic terrorists if they don't agree.
These bills are all admissions of parental incompetence.
But when parents reject the state transitioning their kids, CPS is called.
It appears to be at least two standards.
If the parent didn't sign their kids over to the schools so they don't have to actually parent then the schools couldn't do their bullshit behind ised doors. An involved parent can nip a lot of this idiocy in the bud.
Why not require a background check and have a federal phone registry and a 21 age requirement? If it works for guns, which we have a constitutional right to.
Stop giving them bad ideas. We need to work on getting rid of the stupid restrictions, not creating more out of spite.
Do children also have a constitutional right to bear arms without parent permission?
They should. It would make school shootings a lot more rare. If half the kids in your class are packing do you really want to come in guns blazing?
Mind you I don't know about kindergartens to say 3rs grade. First off I don't think they can absorb the recoil from a pistol. Also they may not really be ready. But 4th grade on, sure. But parents need to be in total control and be totally responsible.
Banning people under age 16 from accessing social media without parental consent "is a breathtakingly blunt instrument" for reducing potential harms, the judge writes.
I assume we're talking about legislative bans here, right?
And magazine bans - - - - - - -
Just call it assault media and declare no one can have more than 10 friends if posting via desktop terminal or 15 friends if connecting by handheld computer.
It won't violate the 1A as you can still have all the friends you like via TTY, the way the Founding Fathers intended.
Today.
Wouldn't this actually INCREASE harm to minors? Ohio's age of consent is also 16, which means if some pervert goes on Facebook to recruit 15-year-old girls, he has an automatic defense that anyone he finds who snuck through the cracks (I'm sure their screening process is REAL robust) MUST have been old enough. This law is a pedophile's literal wet dream!
That my friend is an interesting argument, one that I am sure the Alphabet Mafia would love to be able to use.
Yet again, people who don't want to be bothered with parenting want the government to do the job for them. Those fuckers should have just gotten a dog. No wonder their kids are falling for every idiotic leftist bullshit idea they get fed. If it starts with, "your parents don't care..." then they have the kids full attention.
When my son was in grade school some idiot teacher told them if we leave computers on we waste electricity and that kills polar bears. So when he saw my computer was on he went over and just turned it off. For older machines not the best thing to do, at least that's what the geeks told me then.
We had a talk about how that was not logical, that the teacher wasn't speaking from a position of knowledgeable authority and, since the Penguins of Madagascar was a big deal around then, I told him polar bears eat penguins so fuck 'em. We like penguins more.
Haven't had issues with him believing all that environmentalist bull shit since then. It also kindled his interest in science. A year later when we went to the museum of minerology and paleontology at the School of Mines and Technology he decided that he was going to go to that school and asked one of the students running the dest what he had to do to be a student there.
Today he is getting his degree in Metalurgy at Mines and is working part time for a pro nuclear group shooting down the mythology of global warming.
Yes. I am a proud pappa. Sue me.
This judge is a FOOL! NO CHILD HAS FULL CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS. Try cutting classes for a month, you will be seized by the government. is judge has made a terrible error and the INTENT of his error is to remove rights from PARENTS!
I hope that this case is appealed and I hope that the higher court finds that this judge had no basis for his decision. Then I hope he is removed from the court and disbarred as well.
Mandatory government schooling is wrong. Mandatory limits on hours a person of school age can work during the school year is wrong. These are examples of government doing the work of parents. It is up to parents to encourage their kids to get an education. It is up to parents to insure their child is attending the classes they are supposed to be attending. It is up to parents to determine when and where their children work.
Passing more laws to remove responsibility from parents is wrong. When parents have no responsibility they have no control. Then their kids can be groomed and convinced to get their balls cut off and parents who have ceded control to the government are shit out of luck when it comes to demanding that control back. You signed the kids over to the government. If the government wants them to get a sex change then who are you to stop them.
Look at the Judge's background. They got to make sure that those kids get their doses of Liberal indoctrination. How else are they going to get introduced to transvestites, drag queens and things like anal sex? If this law was allowed to stand, those things might be considered pornographic.
It's not a 1A issue.
Banning people under age 16 from accessing social media without parental consent "is a breathtakingly blunt instrument" for reducing potential harms, the judge writes.
We ban kids from accessing all kinds of stuff without parental consent. And rightfully so, because the State has - for centuries - appropriately recognized that kids are stupid and make terrible choices and that government has no business usurping the role of parent in setting their boundaries.
No sane and honest judge would say, "Banning people under age 16 from accessing tattoo parlors without parental consent "is a breathtakingly blunt instrument" for reducing potential harms." Let alone frame it under 1A - even though one might argue that inking yourself is a freedom of expression.
Because they know that's bogus. Because they acknowledge the likelihood of irreversible damage to immature kids is worse than any temporary liberty deprivation until they reach age of majority. And at this point, it's plainly obvious that social media is more toxic and irreversibly damaging for young people than any other vice/social contagion combined.
You do make a good point. As this ban is a blanket ban on ALL social media and not a content restriction or ban on certain types of speech, it may be constitutional. I'm not saying I agree with this law and I believe social media addiction can be bad for all ages not just children, but you may be right.
A much subtler way to get tech giants to get parental consent would be to explicitly state that no minor can be bound by any "Terms and Conditions" contract accepted in the course of creating an account (likewise software EULA's).
Wanting someone legally on the hook for the T&C, tech companies would then insist that each account be created by a competent adult who accepts responsibility for its use by whomever uses it.
Legislators need not go into details because techies' lawyers would do the fine print -- and they'd continue to refine T&C language in real time to handle any abhorrent case-law (much more responsive than needing new legislation).