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What the First Amendment Actually Means Online

6 min readJan 15, 2021

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Having a debate about the First Amendment in law school was never something that interested me. For some reason, everyone else was always energized by the idea of debating the contours of permissible expression, or what constituted the prior restraint on the press, but I always preferred structure and process-driven questions about federalism, the Administartive Procedure Act, or the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. If you’re wondering if that meant I was considered a weirdo law nerd even among other weirdo law nerds, then I encourage you to re-read the first two sentences of this paragraph to get your answer.

My professors, after I would ask literally any question.

Ah, but how the times have changed. Okay, they haven’t; I’m pretty much the same way now. But after such a long amount of time focused on the internet, privacy, and appropriate uses of data online as part of my practice, the First Amendment and related concepts are square in the middle of much of what I do. I cut my teeth as a litigator doing work on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and I advise on Section 230, the CFAA, and the SCA all the time.

So you can imagine how thrilled I am that the current debates around expression online have turned to a particular area of focus for me, and that everyone is having reasoned, thoughtful discussions about what it…

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James J. Ward
James J. Ward

Written by James J. Ward

Privacy lawyer, data nerd, fan of listing three things. Co-author of “Data Leverage.” Nothing posted is legal advice/don’t get legal advice from blogs.

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