Senate Bill 393 moves to the House for more debate. It declares that social media companies that have more than 20 million users in the United States are common carriers and that they can’t block people from receiving certain messages based on viewpoints, location, race, ethnicity, religion, political beliefs, gender, sexual orientation or disability.
Sounds great so far, but then they go on to say:
Dolezal said companies could still pull down lewd, obscene or offensive materials.
And there is double-standard we all know and love.. Find something lewd and offensive, go back to square one..
Georgia Senate passes bill seeking to regulate social mediaATLANTA (AP) — The Georgia state Senate voted 33-21 on Tuesday to pass a bill that seeks to prohibit social media platforms from removing or censoring content amid an outcry from conservatives that their political views are being discriminated against, even though a similar Texas law has been put on hold by a federal court.