Sixth Circuit Rolls Back Injunction Against Tennessee’s Unconstitutional Age Verification Law

from the putting-the-Constitution-on-the-back-burner dept

Well, that didn’t take long. A short-lived win for civil liberties and the Free Speech Coalition has been undone by the Sixth Circuit Appeals court. The reasoning behind the roll back of the injunction are questionable, to say the least.

The Free Speech Coalition’s case against Tennessee’s age verification law was solid. Or, at least, the lower court certainly thought so.

The legislature has a compelling interest in protecting children from harmful content, and that is uncontested. But in its attempt to protect children, the State will unavoidably suppress a large amount of speech that adults have a First Amendment right to give and receive. The legislature’s goal, however admirable, does not allow it to undermine an adult’s freedom of speech. Neither the legislature nor this Court can turn a blind eye to the Constitution.

Of most concern was the disturbing amount of vagueness in a law that couldn’t seem to define what was or wasn’t covered by it. It also provided no guidance as to how sites were supposed to determine if the content they hosted was more than 30% pornographic. Here’s a quote from one affected site owner the lower court included as a footnote:

“I do not know whether to evaluate the running time of the videos, the lines of code required to display the videos, the size of the files containing viewable content, or some other metric. For that matter, I do not know how to compare text to photos, or photos to videos.”

It also provided no clear directions as to how to go about age verification, while saddling affected sites (and sites that might be affected if someone bringing action against them came up with 30% by using different math) with the burden of figuring this out on their own. No service or method was declared to be acceptable, meaning any choice made to comply with the law might end up being the wrong one.

The lower court said it was extremely intrusive (and obviously unconstitutional) to demand adults give up their privacy to access content they had every legal right to access. And it made even less sense to apply this imposition to users accessing sites where more than two-thirds of the content isn’t considered “harmful to minors” under the statute.

None of that matters to the Sixth Circuit. The law is good, says the appeals court, because some stuff on porn sites is objectively bad. It’s common sense arguments versus moral panic at the Sixth, and the moral panic-ists have the upper hand, at least for the moment. From the order [PDF] staying the injunction:

Tennessee’s law seeks to protect children from the devastating effects of easy access to on-demand pornography. These effects are well-documented; they include social disengagement, increased delinquency, mental health and body-image difficulties (especially for girls), riskier and earlier sexual behaviors and increased transmission of sexually transmitted diseases, increased objectification of women and stereotyping, and greater likelihoods of committing and suffering sexual violence. R. 29-2, Principi Study, PageID 480-82.

This shouldn’t be a surprise. One celebrated investigation of a leading pornography site found the site ‘infested with rape videos’ and described how it ‘monetizes child rapes, revenge pornography, spy cam videos of women showering, racist and misogynist content, and footage of women being asphyxiated in plastic bags.’ Nicholas Kristof, The Children of Pornhub, N.Y.
Times (Dec. 4, 2020). And that barely even scratches the surface. Searches for ‘girls under 18’
or ’14yo’ yielded hundreds of thousands of results. This content corrodes healthy childhood development and poisons impressionable minds; pornography sites will show kids ‘how to have
anal sex long before they’ve had their first kiss.’ Jonathan Haidt, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness 105 (2024).

Children can’t buy cigarettes or alcohol, much less visit a strip club, but in the online Wild West, anything goes for anyone of any age. Children’s easy access to hardcore internet pornography, made possible by modern computers and smartphones, is part of what one social psychologist has called ‘the Great Rewiring of Childhood.’ Id. at 35

Man, those citations. All bangers, all the time. “Principi Study” isn’t going to direct anyone to the study being cited (which may be this one, but also may not be this one). Next up is sex trafficking alarmist Nick Kristof, who hasn’t exactly covered himself in glory during his years of advocating for mass internet censorship. Jonathan Haidt is no better. He’s the person you go to when you want your biases confirmed. He’s spent years making things worse for kids (and for parents raising kids) while utilizing bad data and questionable assumptions to present himself as a potential savior of the youths.

That’s the counterargument presented by the court. It barely asks Tennessee AG Jonathan Skrmetti to argue anything more than “no, it isn’t” when confronting several well thought-out assertions of unconstitutionality.

The last citation is probably the worst:

What’s more, other circuits (and the Supreme Court) have let similar state laws go into effect. The Fifth Circuit vacated a preliminary injunction and determined that Texas’s age-verification law was likely constitutional because under Ginsberg v. New York, (1968), laws regulating speech that is obscene for minors need only satisfy rational-basis review. Free Speech Coal. v. Paxton, (5th Cir. 2024), stay denied 144 S. Ct. 1473 (mem.), cert. granted 144 S. Ct. 2714 (mem.). And when the Supreme Court granted certiorari, it declined to block Texas’s law pending appeal. 144 S. Ct. 1473 (mem.); 144 S. Ct. 2714 (mem.). The Seventh Circuit then stayed an injunction against Indiana’s age-verification law, letting the law go into effect while the Supreme Court considered the Paxton case.

What’s more, this certain appellate court that has spent the last few years engaging in some truly batshit interpretations of the First Amendment vacated an injunction and this Supreme Court, which has spent the last few years engaging in some truly batshit interpretations of all sorts of constitutional rights, didn’t put it back in place. And then another circuit entirely simply chose to hold off until an extremely relevant case was fully decided.

That’s not a judgment on the merits of the arguments in front of this court. This is just a judge clearly sympathetic to Tennessee’s case finding reasons to let the law go into effect while it tosses it back to the lower court with no clear instructions as to what it’s supposed to do with this quasi-op-ed the Sixth Circuit is pretending is an order that actually has something to say about the issues at hand.

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Comments on “Sixth Circuit Rolls Back Injunction Against Tennessee’s Unconstitutional Age Verification Law”

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43 Comments
MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

It’s particular to the individual. Some of them became slightly more compassionate when their own kids came out as gay or transgender, though others doubled down. Some of them loosened their judgment when their own daughters became pregnant by a rapist.

Unfortunately, some of them will lose something they rely on like Medicare or Social Security or disability benefits and wonder why the evil gubberment has done this without thinking it could have resulted from their hero’s decisions. Must be the deep state or the Democrats!

What’s worse is the people who aren’t brainwashed but who still vote that way because they perceive that it benefits them. The ones who want their stock to go up a tick are the real problem because you can’t reach them by any moral argument. They only feel it in their wallet and they’ll flip the next election if they think it will benefit them.

EricDraccip (profile) says:

one third should pose more 1st amendment problems

If the law requires that it will only go into effect, if there is more than 1/3 of content.

Then it logically implicates that the law would force individuals in the development of more content so that there always below the threshold of 1/3.

However if a law explicitly would do such a thing that would be unacceptable to the first amendment, it seems however we can get around it indirectly.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

if a law explicitly would do such a thing that would be unacceptable to the first amendment, it seems however we can get around it indirectly

People shouldn’t have to “get around it”. They should be able to show that such restrictions are, on their face, an affront to the First Amendment⁠—which they can, despite the decision by the Sixth Circuit.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

The argument the Sixth Circuit presents doesn’t even have anything to do with the Tennessee law (which just says to implement age verification if Any sort of ‘pornographic material’ is available, not just specific kinds of porn like the argument mentions). This is like if I wrote a law preventing the sale of cookies which got an injunction and then the the circuit rolls it back because one time someone put a razor blade in a cookie. What?

Also not surprised to see Kristof’s NYT article cited – I don’t know if there’s any one newspaper article that’s done as much damage to the open internet as it in recent years.

Anonymous Coward says:

This shouldn’t be a surprise. One celebrated investigation of a leading pornography site found the site ‘infested with rape videos’ and described how it ‘monetizes child rapes, revenge pornography, spy cam videos of women showering, racist and misogynist content, and footage of women being asphyxiated in plastic bags.’ Nicholas Kristof, The Children of Pornhub, N.Y.
Times (Dec. 4, 2020). And that barely even scratches the surface. Searches for ‘girls under 18’

I’m reasonably certain most/all of that is already illegal. So what the argument is “lets legally difficult to access illegal content, and damn any legal content caught in the cross file”

Man they should have made accessing illegal stuff legally difficult form the beginning. could have solved so many problems /s

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Pornhub also scrubbed a hell of a lot of that kind of content (and more) from the site when it started limiting who could post videos to the site. The chances of such content being found on Pornhub these days will always be non-zero, but they’re still low enough that comparing Pornhub back then to Pornhub now is unfair.

Age verification laws will keep driving people to sites that don’t have AV walls in place. Many of those sites will have the kinds of content mentioned in that paragraph. At some point, someone will have to decide which outcome is preferable: people watching porn on “safe” sites or people watching porn on “unsafe” sites.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

The law is vaguely worded because it’s like a Personal Improvement Plan from an employer who is planning on firing you, but wants documentation first and so presents you with terms it doesn’t expect you to meet. The law is basically saying solve the issue either by shutting down access entirely or we’ll accuse you of failing to comply by whatever metrics we decide you’re not following. Conservatives have already admitted that age verification is a first step to banning porn.

Anonymous Coward says:

Another case of the stupid puritanist bullshit once again, with the courts abandoning all reason to aid it.

Give it a few years and you’ll need an ID to access the internet at all (and porn will still be functionally banned of course, maybe.)

At least hackers will be having a good time, suppose. Maybe that’ll highlight why this was a bad idea in the first place.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

“Give it a few years and you’ll need an ID to access the internet at all (and porn will still be functionally banned of course, maybe.)

At least hackers will be having a good time, suppose. Maybe that’ll highlight why this was a bad idea in the first place.” please shut it with the doomposting

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

At this point it’s more frustrated grumbling than doomposting. I’m not of the opinion that it’s inevitable but I’m damn well ticked off that it’s going this direction and that it’s such a pervasive, regressive mindset that seems to be winning out, for the moment.

People talk about pendulum swings a lot, sure as hell hope it’ll be swinging the other way soon.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Sorry, degenerates: protecting children from groomers and the harms of the evil pornography industry are back on the menu!

Great example you’re setting for them. Especially if you want them to be as dependent on government as you all are.

If you really want to keep them away from groomers, why don’t you stop taking them to church? Or is that also outside of your parenting skills?

Anonymous Coward says:

I’m sorry, but so many of the reasons the court cites are not related to underage viewing of porn. How many children engage in rape of other children? How many children get STDs from other children without there having been some adult in the chain?

Body Image? Has the court seen the latest issues of People, or even Time? How about daytime TV?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

so many of the reasons the court cites are not related to underage viewing of porn

Therein lies the rub: The people who want age verification laws care about stopping children from watching porn, but they care more about stopping adults from watching porn.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Doesn’t help that neither judges in the higher courts nor even a good deal of democrats seem (emphasis on SEEM) to care about this, let alone lawmakers in other countries.

If it’s not christo-facist puritans, it’s the age-verification tech companies lobbying for it. GAH.

At least there’s a good chance it’s going to blow up disasterously in their own faces in due time.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

On a long enough timeline, they’ll ban any reading that isn’t Bible reading, too. Children who read books other than The Good Word™ might develop critical thinking skills. That would wreck the plans of the GOP and their Christian nationalist allies, who want a populace they can manipulate with ease.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: 'It says WHAT?!'

On a long enough timeline, they’ll ban any reading that isn’t Bible reading, too.

Followed by taking lessons from history by banning reading of the bible by anyone not sufficiently ‘educated'(read: Indoctrinated and/or dishonest) on the subject, because as I’ve heard more than once ‘the quickest way to deconvert as a christian is to read the bible’

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

LittleCupcakes says:

Free Speech Coalition

As usual, Techdirt has chosen to deliberately hide the fact that the “Free Speech Coalition” is a trade and lobbying group for the pornography industry. I don’t understand why Techdirt refuses to correctly identify and characterize it.

The “Free Speech Coalition” is not a principled free speech group nor is it an objective third party. The group exists because the pornography industry created and funds it to be their tool and front group. Its sole and exclusive purpose is to promote the creation and sale of more porn, for everyone, everywhere, without limit.

Good for them, what a country, etc. But they are exactly as objective on this issue as the National Auto Dealers Association is on EV mandates (for example) and their opinion and position on this issue shouldn’t matter to anyone.

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