WASHINGTON—Yesterday was the deadline for interested parties to submit amicus curiae briefs in support of our landmark Supreme Court cases against the states of Florida and Texas, Moody v. NetChoice & CCIA and NetChoice & CCIA v. Paxton.
NetChoice would like to thank each of the 127 signatories that filed 44 supportive briefs to the Supreme Court for consideration in our cases.
“NetChoice is incredibly grateful for the diverse range of interested groups, individuals and businesses that have weighed in on our landmark Supreme Court cases to defend the First Amendment online,” said Chris Marchese, NetChoice Litigation Center Director. “The internet is a critical tool for free expression and free enterprise, and it should remain free from government censorship. With these crucial analyses, in addition to our oral arguments, we are confident the High Court will agree.”
Find the 44 briefs in support of our cases here:
- American Jewish Committee
- Americans for Prosperity Foundation
- Article 19: Global Campaign for Free Expression, International Justice Clinic at University of California-Irvine School Of Law, and Open Net Association, Inc.
- Bluesky, a Public Benefit Corporation, M. Chris Riley, an individual, and Floor64, Inc. d/b/a the Copia Institute
- Cato Institute
- Center for Democracy & Technology
- The Center for Growth and Opportunity at Utah State University, Freedom Foundation of Minnesota, Illinois Policy Institute, Independent Institute, The James Madison Institute, The John Locke Foundation, Libertas Institute, Mountain States Policy Center, Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, Pelican Institute, R Street Institute, and Rio Grande Foundation
- The Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America
- Chamber of Progress; Access Now; Consumer Technology Association; HONR Network; Information Technology & Innovation Foundation; Information Technology Industry Council; Interactive Advertising Bureau; IP Justice; LGBT Tech; Stop Child Predators; TechNet; and WashingTech
- Developers Alliance and Software & Information Industry Association
- Discord, Inc.
- Electronic Frontier Foundation, National Coalition Against Censorship, Woodhull Freedom Foundation, Authors Alliance, Fight for the Future, and First Amendment Coalition
- Engine Advocacy
- Former Representative Chris Cox and Senator Ron Wyden
- First Amendment and Internet Law Scholars
- Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression
- Francis Fukuyama
- Professor Eric Goldman
- Goldwater Institute
- Professors Richard L. Hasen, Brendan Nyhan, and Amy Wilentz
- International Center for Law & Economics
- Internet Society
- Internet Works, Glassdoor, LLC, Indeed, Inc., Nextdoor, Inc., Mozilla Corporation, Pinterest, Inc., Tripadvisor, LLC, Tumblr, Inc., Vimeo, Inc.
- Liberty Justice Center
- U.S. Senator Ben Ray Luján
- Marketplace Industry Association; Etsy, Inc.; OfferUp, Inc.; and eBay, Inc.
- Media Law Resource Center, Inc.
- Moderators of R/Law and R/Scotus
- National Taxpayers Union Foundation
- PEN American Center and Library Futures
- Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies
- Professors of History
- Protect the First Foundation
- Public Knowledge
- Reason Foundation, Committee for Justice, Competitive Enterprise Institute, and Taxpayers Protection Alliance
- Reddit, Inc.
- Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the American Civil Liberties Union
- Solicitor General of the United States of America
- TechFreedom
- The Trust & Safety Foundation
- Washington Legal Foundation
- Wikimedia Foundation
- Yelp, Inc.
- Professor Christopher S. Yoo
You can find our resources on Moody v. NetChoice & CCIA here and NetChoice & CCIA v. Paxton here.
Please contact Krista Chavez at press@netchoice.org with inquiries.