When you "like" something on Facebook, that expression
is indeed covered by the First Amendment, Facebook is arguing in a new court
document.
The friend-of-the-court brief, filed last night, also urges an
appeals court to vacate a recent ruling by a judge in Virginia that Facebook "likes" are not
protected speech.
In that ruling
in the spring, U.S. District Judge Raymond Jackson had said, essentially, that
just clicking a Facebook button differs materially from the kinds of statements
traditionally protected by the First Amendment. As a result, the judge
dismissed a claim by six employees of the Hampton, Va., sheriff's department
that they had been wrongfully fired for supporting a candidate opposing the
sheriff in a 2009 election. Three of those employees had "liked" the
Facebook page of the sheriff's opponent.
Facebook takes issue with that logic -- enough so to warrant the
rare step for the social-networking giant of filing the friend-of-the-court
briefing in a visible sign of interest in entering a legal fray on behalf of
the rights of its users.
Here is an excerpt from a summary of the social networking giant's
argument (you can read the whole of the filing in the embed below):
Facebook
emphasizes that the medium shouldn't determine whether a statement is protected
under the First Amendment:
The American Civil Liberties Union, which also filed a friend brief (PDF) last night in the appeal of Judge Jackson's ruling, was fully
supportive of the social network's action.
"Facebook should be applauded for filing this brief to
support the free speech rights of its users," the ACLU said in a
statement. "Facebook has become a means of communication for tens of
millions of Americans, and if basic activity on Facebook such as 'liking' were
denied First Amendment protection, the free expression of ideas that the First
Amendment is meant to safeguard would be severely limited."
In its 26-page document, Facebook goes into further detail
explaining how the social network works in general, how "liking" a
Facebook Page works, and why the judge came to an "erroneous
conclusion." The company concludes that the court should "vacate the
grant of summary judgment" and "remand the case."
The ball is now back in the judge's court.
--From CNET news
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