Texas’s War On Abortion Is Now A War On Free Speech
from the another-censorship-bill dept
Once again, the Texas legislature is coming after the most common method of safe and effective abortion today—medication abortion.
Senate Bill (S.B.) 2880* seeks to prevent the sale and distribution of abortion pills—but it doesn’t stop there. By restricting access to certain information online, the bill tries to keep people from learning about abortion drugs, or even knowing that they exist.
If passed, S.B. 2880 would make it illegal to “provide information” on how to obtain an abortion-inducing drug. If you exchange e-mails or have an online chat about seeking an abortion, you could violate the bill. If you create a website that shares information about legal abortion services in other states, you could violate the bill. Even your social media posts could put you at risk.
On top of going after online speakers who create and post content themselves, the bill also targets social media platforms, websites, email services, messaging apps, and any other “interactive computer service” simply for hosting or making that content available.
In other words, Texas legislators not only want to make sure no one can start a discussion on these topics, they also want to make sure no one can find one. The goal is to wipe this information from the internet altogether. That creates glaring free-speech issues with this bill and, if passed, the consequences would be dire.
The bill is carefully designed to scare people into silence.
First, S.B. 2880 empowers average citizens to sue anyone that violates the law. An “interactive computer service” can also be sued if it “allows residents of [Texas] to access information or material that aids, abets, assists or facilitates efforts to obtain elective abortions or abortion-inducing drugs.”
So, similar to Texas Senate Bill 8, the bill encourages anyone to file lawsuits against those who merely speak about or provide access to certain information. This is intended to, and will, chill free speech. The looming threat of litigation can be used to silence those who seek to give women truthful information about their reproductive options—potentially putting their health or lives in danger.
Second, S.B. 2880 encourages online intermediaries to take down abortion-related content. For example, if sued under the law, a defendant platform can escape liability by showing that, once discovered, they promptly “block[ed] access to any information . . . that assists or facilitates efforts to obtain elective abortions or abortion-inducing drugs.”
The bill also grants them “absolute and nonwaivable immunity” against claims arising from takedowns, denials of service, or any other “action taken to restrict access to or availability of [this] information.” In other words, if someone sues a social media platform or internet service provider for censorship, they are well-shielded from facing consequences. This further tips the scales in favor of blocking more websites, posts, and users.
In three different provisions of the 43-page bill, the drafters go out of their way to assure us that S.B. 2880 should not be construed to prohibit speech or conduct that’s protected by the First Amendment. But simply stating that the law does not restrict free speech does not make it so. The obvious goal of this bill is to restrict access to information about abortion medications online. It’s hard to imagine what claims could be brought under such a bill that don’t implicate our free speech rights.
The bill’s imposition of civil and criminal liability also conflicts with a federal law that protects online intermediaries’ ability to host user-generated speech, 47 U.S.C. § 230 (“Section 230”), including speech about abortion medication. Although the bill explicitly states that it does not conflict with Section 230, that assurance remains meaningful only so long as Section 230’s protections remain robust. But Congress is currently considering revisions—or even a full repeal of Section 230. Any weakening of Section 230 will create more space for those empowered by this bill to use the courts to pressure intermediaries/platforms to remove information about abortion medication.
Whenever the government tries to restrict our ability to access information, our First Amendment rights are threatened. This is exactly what Texas lawmakers are trying to do with S.B. 2880. Anyone who cares about free speech—regardless of how they feel about reproductive care—should urge lawmakers to oppose this bill and others like it.
*H.B. 5510 is the identical House version of S.B. 2880.
Originally published to the EFF Deeplinks blog.
Filed Under: abortion, free speech, mifepristone, sb 2880, texas



Comments on “Texas’s War On Abortion Is Now A War On Free Speech”
Let’s face it folks. The USA has been horribly over-thrown, by a horde of patently evil creatures disguised as Christians. Fascism always wins.
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Cool story bro.
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True story ‘bro’…
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There’s no disguise.
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And if the assertion had been that the patently evil creatures were disguised as Jews, would you still have claimed there’s no disguise? Nothing to make clear your bigotry against a particular religion than bullshit like what you spouted.
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“Treating two completely different things differently is hypocrisy” isn’t as great of an argument as you imagine it is, child.
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TIL: Judaism and Christianity are not alike in that they both religions. Nice anti-religious bigotry, toddler. Keep throwing your toys out of your pram.
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Amazing! After months of being sent to the “To many Requests” and erasing my posts prior to publication, forcing me to sign in under a number of different handles – like Jess Sane, and Rick O’shea – just to get a comment posted, and finally disallowing posting altogether by disallowing my computerID, this post actually got published! I am amazed by this new TechDirt the T.Rump Disministration has forced into existence.
It is a war. And they’re winning it by the looks of it..
What is happening to individual rights?
I waiting for the Women to pass a bill Against, Smoking, Football and Alcohol.
And solve ALL their problems.
Once this Bill this Abortion bill passes, it will get passed in Other states? WHY?
They already killed Porn in many states, so that many goto OUT of the USA sites to view things they like.
They Just LOVe frustrated Men?? That Then Go out and ??? women?
LOGIC in the USA is getting REAL UGLY. they Want a Larger population in the USA, For What reason??
More military? More consumers to make More money for the STAY AT HOME capitalists?
We asked the Corps in the past to Clean up, and the SMART corps LEFT the USA for better locations, WITH Their Capitalist Owners, and Left us with us with the Bill collectors that DONT CREATE ANYTHING. And our Gov. has been trying to Clean up the Worst Sites Ever since.
Would have loved to see an international tribunal to get them to PAY for the cleanup and PAY for the Hospitalization of those affected(MANY were/ARE affected).
ALL Im seeing here is a BORED STATE. That If the People DONT FIRE every one of the elected, will have to live by the IDIOCENTRACTIC laws they make.
So, if ISPs decided they want to stop actually providing internet service (but still bill you), the have “absolute” immunity as long as they claim it was to stop you from learning about or sharing the “horrible” information.
Sounds reasonable. /s
Good for the goose...
Any law on abortion should also be required to apply equally to Viagra.
Ban abortion? Ban viagra. Limit abortion? Limit viagra. Permission from parents? Permission from spouse.
What “protects” the goose, protects the gander.
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Viagra is gender-affirming care.
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Don’t forget hair implants and boob jobs…
And yes I mean Don and Melania’s
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I don’t see how since trans women won’t want to use it and trans men have no use for it since they can’t get erect in the same way that cis men can. Flagged for anti-trans bigotry on a par with Valis’ racism.
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Unless I’m mistaken, the point was that Viagra could be described as gender-affirming care for cis men.
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Hint: Non-Trans people have genders that can be affirmed too.
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Hint: Viagra affirms sexuality, not gender.
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On what planet are Mifepristone and Viagra comparable? If this is some bizarre attempt at “equality”… this subject has no inherent equality to it. Sorry. Men don’t have babies. Viagra is not an essential tool for treating life threatening situations. The protection of the right and capability for an abortion is necessary primarily because the sexes bear an inequal amount of risk in this regard.
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i think we miss how much fucking noise would be made by straight white cis male whiners if viagara were to receive the same treatment; and the point.
Why do they need to be somehow fucking “equivalent” (impossible)?
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Tell that to Thomas Beatie, you anti-trans bigot.
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That’s dumb, but… OK, deal. We’ll put the exact same restriction on Viagra as the abortion pill. The chosen restriction is: you can’t have it if you’re pregnant.
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Information is protected free speech
20 years ago there some guy in travel usenet news groups advising usa Australia dual citizens on what air routes from Australia to get to cuba and avoid a US connecting city and someone on that group claimed they were committing a crime providing that info
They were not
Merely providing information is free speech
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If a platform is not in the united states it will not be subject to that law
Vkontakt in Russia and tiktok in China are not subject to usa law
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By TikTok, you mean TikTok US, which is a US company with data stored in US soil by another US company (Oracle).
Re: Go big or go home
I comfort people in China by telling them that Google Search in the USA is not subject to Chinese law.
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Actually, it’s not, which is why the Chinese government have to block it in place of ordering it to cease operations. Your point?
Texas was already a war against free speech.
“TikTok’s global headquarters are in Los Angeles and Singapore.”
lifeattiktok.com
'We're not saying you should... just that we have your back if you do.'
In three different provisions of the 43-page bill, the drafters go out of their way to assure us that S.B. 2880 should not be construed to prohibit speech or conduct that’s protected by the First Amendment. But simply stating that the law does not restrict free speech does not make it so.
‘Look just because our bill is called ‘Yes You Can And Should Literally Hunt Down These People With Lethal Intent’, and just because it makes crystal clear that it provides total legal immunity for anyone that does literally start hunting fellow humans of the Other-sort that doesn’t mean we’re encouraging or condoning violence against anyone!’
Fair fair..
Well the obvious response is for a Blue State to pass a similar law regarding the distribution of information on how to obtain Guns, Bibles and Cowboy hats.
Should just remove Texas from the net if they won’t do it themselves.
Or just remove it, full stop.
i volunteer to help non-trash humans leave first.
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Too late, Trump’s already begin deporting them to an El Salvadorian hellhole.
State sponsor of Terror?
The inclusion of denial of service in there is alarming, because it looks a looks at first glance like they’re they’re outright greenlighting cyberattacks on abortion information providers.
And it would be a gross understatment to say there’s a a non-zero chance that some people will take it as a green light to take violent action “to restrict access to this infoformatio ”, in the the real world as well.
he he he – well, I tried.
Bye bye folks