"States must step in to hold X and Musk accountable, if Trump’s DOJ won’t," Wyden said.
The law has drawn ire from both the left and the right.
Brendan Carr has been auditioning to run the FCC since 2017. He wants to rewrite Section 230, give money to Elon Musk, and supports punishing TV stations on behalf of his boss.
The ruling could have a huge effect on how tech companies uses algorithms to recommend content.
From parental consent requirements and encryption breakers to full-on TikTok bans, lawmakers are trying to outdo themselves on boneheaded tech bills.
A federal judge had barred government agencies from contacting social media companies with takedown requests, normally routine inquiries.
A federal judge ordered Biden officials and others in the executive branch to stop the practice of suggesting content moderation takedown requests.
Experts fear the new wave of laws run up against First Amendment protections.
Citing the Facebook Papers, two parents are targeting Instagram's algorithms rather than its third-party content in hopes of circumventing Section 230.
Social media companies are facing intense scrutiny worldwide for the content their users post.
An appeals court ruled against a law that would've punished online platforms for content moderation.
The law had been under temporary injunction after social media companies sued back in 2021.
Greene's bill would attempt to classify social media platforms as common carries and prevent them from removing political content.
Over 60 organizations spoke out against the new bill which could threaten encryption and incentivize increased surveillance.
The law would have prohibited major social media platforms with more than 50 million users from removing users based on their political viewpoint.
If the Senate approves her and other nominees, the FCC can avoid a Republican majority and start fixing Trump-era rollbacks.
CNN has deleted its Facebook page in Australia after the country's high court found media outlets responsible for defamatory reader comments.
The 'Freedom from Censorship Act' hampers companies' ability to crack down on Nazi propaganda and medical misinformation, a new lawsuit claims.
The Health Misinformation Act would make websites, including Facebook, liable for algorithmically amplifying some health-related misinformation.
The judge said the law likely runs afoul of the First Amendment.