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Topic Review (Newest First)
April 6th, 2018 01:11 PM
Drukpa Kunley
BP is gone

BP is history
April 6th, 2018 12:55 PM
spunky1 It may just be a glitch in my system, but it looks like Backpage website may be down. So ends another adult comic.
April 4th, 2018 07:45 PM
Hugh G. Rexion "Plaintiffs have alleged facts suggesting that Defendants materially contributed to the content of the advertisements, and thus the issue of CDA immunity cannot be resolved on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss in this case."

Thats all you need to read about this ruling. Backpage is accused of assisting with the ad content so they are on the hook.
April 4th, 2018 07:18 PM
Drukpa Kunley
Backpage Loses Another Section 230 Motion

Backpage Loses Another Section 230 Motion (without SESTA-FOSTA) – in Florida Abolitionists v. Backpage

The Massachusetts court (without SESTA-FOSTA) also denied Backpage’s Section 230 motion to dismiss in Doe v. Backpage

During Congress’ SESTA-FOSTA deliberations, opponents repeatedly promised that the Doe v. Backpage litigation in Massachusetts would imminently provide key insights into Section 230’s purported limitations.

Indeed, a week after the Senate passed the Worst of Both Worlds FOSTA, the Massachusetts court denied Backpage’s Section 230 motion to dismiss–exactly as the opponents had argued. The tiny time gap between the Senate’s passage and the Doe v. Backpage ruling highlighted Congress’ possible hastiness.

The Massachusetts litigation is only one of many pending lawsuits against Backpage.

Again last week (also about a week after the Senate’s passage), another court–this time in Florida–denied Backpage’s Section 230 motion to dismiss in Florida Abolitionists v. Backpage

So now we have 2 court rulings, each within 10 days of the Senate’s passage, each indicating that the courts are already doing what Congress thought Worst of Both Worlds FOSTA was required to achieve.

The Florida court contextualizes Section 230 by saying: “Some courts characterize the ‘protection’ of § 230(c)(1) as ‘a broad immunity,’ but this view is not universal. ” [cites to Chicago Lawyers v. Craigslist and Barnes v. Yahoo]

Even without the scare quotes around protection, this statement is a bad sign for the defense because it means the court will ignore many precedential cases saying that Section 230 is a broad immunity and instead cite some outlier cases that the court will read tendentiously (e.g., the Barnes case says that Section 230 immunity isn’t “absolute,” which is not a synonym for “broad”). Thus, the court’s contextualization signals strongly that this judge isn’t comfortable with Section 230; and it’s a leading indicator of judicial activism.

The court concludes:

Even if § 230(c)(1) is something other than an affirmative defense and can be properly addressed on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, factual issues preclude a ruling on the § 230(c)(1) issue at this stage of the case…Plaintiffs have alleged facts suggesting that Defendants materially contributed to the content of the advertisements, and thus the issue of CDA immunity cannot be resolved on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss in this case.

A thinly reasoned opinion is enough to demonstrate the illogic of Congress’ hasty passage of the Worst of Both Worlds FOSTA.

Case citation: Florida Abolitionist v. Backpage.com LLC, 2018 WL 1587477 (M.D. Fla. March 31, 2018). Plaintiff’s complaint. Backpage’s Motion to Dismiss.

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