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5 Tech Giants Let UK Speech Regulator Preview New Features
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5 Tech Giants Let UK Speech Regulator Preview New Features

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Five of the biggest online platforms have for some reason just agreed to let Britain’s speech regulator Ofcom preview new features before they launch. Facebook, Instagram, Roblox, Snap, and YouTube will now notify the regulator whenever they update risk assessments before making significant product changes, going beyond what the Online Safety Act requires. TikTok refused, saying it would notify Ofcom only “where required.” The result is a pre-approval pipeline where a government regulator can pressure companies to alter features before users ever see them, without any formal legal process. Meta’s commitment deserves the most scrutiny. The company will deploy AI tools to monitor everyone’s messages in order to “detect likely sexualised conversations between adults and teens in Instagram direct messages” and report flagged accounts to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. The timing is not subtle as Meta stripped end-to-end encryption from Instagram DMs on May 8, 2026, citing low adoption. The company never turned encryption on by default, never told most users it existed, and then used the low uptake it engineered as justification for removing it. With encryption gone, Meta can now read every Instagram message, and it’s immediately weaponizing that access as a scanning tool. Whether any human reviews these AI-generated flags before they reach NCMEC remains unclear from Ofcom’s published documents. Snap committed to “highly effective age assurance” for all UK users over the summer. Ofcom CEO Melanie Dawes told LBC that Snapchat is “no longer going to be allowing adults to find kids randomly,” calling the change “long overdue.” That Snapchat was still surfacing adult strangers to 13-year-olds through its recommendation engine until forced to stop says more than any safety pledge. The fix applies only to UK users. Globally, the feature remains active. TikTok and YouTube both declined to make additional commitments, insisting their platforms are already safe for children. Ofcom’s own research says otherwise: 73% of 11-to-17-year-olds reported encountering harmful content over four weeks, primarily through personalized feeds. Even with multiple platforms voluntarily expanding surveillance, Ofcom wants more. The regulator has written to Secretary of State Liz Kendall requesting new powers to enforce minimum age requirements, noting it is “not currently convinced” that Snapchat, Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok will “effectively prevent children under 13 from accessing their sites and apps.” Ofcom’s data shows 84% of 8-to-12-year-olds are already on these platforms. The anonymous internet is being replaced by one that demands identity documents, biometric scans, or behavioral profiling as the price of participation. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post 5 Tech Giants Let UK Speech Regulator Preview New Features appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Texas Woman Arrested for Facebook Post About Town Water Quality
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Texas Woman Arrested for Facebook Post About Town Water Quality

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Jennifer Combs had never gotten so much as a speeding ticket. On May 8, police in Trinidad, Texas, arrested her on a state jail felony charge for writing a Facebook post about the town’s water supply. The post said residents had been hospitalized due to bacteria in the water. The city says that claim was false. So they sent cops to her door. The charge is felony false alarm or report under Texas Penal Code § 42.06, a statute designed for people who call in fake bomb threats or fabricate emergencies. Trinidad’s police chief and local officials decided it also applies to a woman who ran a community Facebook page and relayed what neighbors told her about getting sick. Combs’ post, published on her “Southern Belle Watch” account, read in part: “We have received reports that some citizens have been hospitalized due to bacteria in the water. This is a serious public health concern that deserves immediate attention. If your water looks discolored, contains sediment, has a strong odor, or you have experienced related health issues, please send us a message. We are gathering information and reporting findings to the state.” That post got her a night in the Navarro County Justice Center. She has since filed a federal lawsuit alleging the arrest was “an act of deliberate political retaliation.” We obtained a copy of the lawsuit for you here. The water is brown. The city admits it. Trinidad, a small city in Henderson County about an hour southeast of Dallas, has a water problem that nobody disputes. Photos provided to FOX 4 show brown liquid pouring from faucets and filling bathtubs. Combs described it as looking like “the Trinity River is flowing from their water taps.” The city’s mayor, Dennis Haws, told reporters the pipes date back to the 1950s. “We have to get to a position where we can fix that infrastructure, and it’s very expensive as I’m sure you can imagine,” Haws said. “The city’s water situation is a struggle, without question.” Haws would not confirm whether anyone had gotten sick from the water. He acknowledged discussions about forming a committee to address the issue. On April 21, the city itself issued a formal boil water notice, telling residents not to drink, cook with, or wash dishes in the water without boiling it first. That notice came fifteen days after the Trinidad Police Department posted a public warning on Facebook, citing the false alarm statute and telling residents that false reports about a public water supply could be elevated to a state jail felony. So the city’s own police department threatened felony prosecution over claims about water safety, and then two weeks later the city confirmed the water required boiling before use. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality confirmed it received a complaint about Trinidad’s water and that an investigation is ongoing. Combs told FOX 4 that multiple citizens had posted on Trinidad PD’s own Facebook page claiming they were hospitalized or affected by the water. She was gathering those reports and passing them along. The police chief’s position is that her hospitalization claims “are simply false and have only caused unnecessary fear and confusion in our community.” Chief Charles Gregory called the case “cut and dry.” What Gregory is really saying is that a resident who collected and shared reports from her neighbors about a public health issue, on a platform where those same neighbors were posting similar complaints, committed a felony by doing so. The statute requires that a person *knowingly* circulate a false report. Combs says she was repeating what people told her. Gregory says she should have verified it with the hospitals first. One of those positions treats citizens as participants in public life. The other treats them as suspects. “It was probably one of the most humiliating things I’ve ever gone through in my entire life. It was very, very bad,” Combs said of her night in jail. “I feel like this is an extreme stretch,” she added. Combs pointed to the broader situation residents face. “There’s people that are saying that their appliances are getting ruined, they can’t cook with the water, they can’t bathe with it, they can’t do laundry,” she said. “A lot of them feel hushed, and like they don’t have a voice and no one listens to them and no one takes them seriously.” That last part is the chilling effect laid bare. When a city arrests someone for a Facebook post about water quality, the message to every other resident is clear: talk about this and you could be next. The false alarm statute exists to punish people who deliberately fabricate emergencies to waste public resources. Using it against a woman who said “we have received reports” about a water problem that the city itself later confirmed is a use of law enforcement to silence public speech about a public safety failure. Whether Combs’ specific claim about hospitalizations was accurate or not, the arrest tells every resident in Trinidad that raising concerns about their water can land them in jail. That is a more dangerous outcome than any Facebook post. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Texas Woman Arrested for Facebook Post About Town Water Quality appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Hawaii To Pay Up After Trying to Criminalize Political Memes
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Hawaii To Pay Up After Trying to Criminalize Political Memes

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Hawaii has agreed to pay $118,237.47 in attorney’s fees and costs to The Babylon Bee and local activist Dawn O’Brien, closing the books on a failed attempt to make some political satire a criminal act. The state chose not to appeal a January ruling that struck down its so-called deepfake law, Act 191, as facially unconstitutional. It tried to ban speech. It lost. Now, taxpayers are covering the bill. The settlement comes with an unusual wrinkle. Hawaii can’t actually pay yet. The agreement is contingent on the state legislature appropriating the funds during its next session, which runs from January to May 2027. If the legislature doesn’t approve the money by September 1, 2027, the Bee and O’Brien retain the right to file a formal motion for attorney’s fees, meaning the case would reopen and the final number could climb. Act 191, signed by Governor Josh Green in July 2024, banned the distribution of “materially deceptive media” during election seasons if it risked “harming the reputation or electoral prospects of a candidate” or “changing the voting behavior of voters.” The only escape for satirists was to slap joke-killing disclaimers on their content, disclaimers that had to appear throughout the entirety of a video and be printed in letters as large as any other text on screen. Violations carried fines, civil lawsuits, and jail time. The law didn’t require anyone to actually be harmed or deceived. It punished speech based on a speculative “risk” of harm, a standard so vague that the person posting had no reliable way to know whether they were complying. US District Judge Shanlyn Park found that the law “muddies the line between compliance and noncompliance by forcing speakers to base their conduct on their own risk assessment, rather than on clear, objective standards.” She noted the law created an “inherently subjective assessment for enforcement agencies” that “could conceivably lead to discretionary and targeted enforcement that discriminates based on viewpoint.” Hawaii argued the law was needed to protect election integrity. Park acknowledged that interest but found the state couldn’t show it had chosen the least restrictive means. Hawaii’s own expert agreed that digital literacy education would work, objecting only that it “would require a larger investment of resources” compared to a ban. Park cited the Supreme Court: “The First Amendment does not permit the State to sacrifice speech for efficiency.” ADF legal counsel Mathew Hoffmann said: “Hawaii’s war against political memes and satire has come to an end, thankfully. The First Amendment doesn’t allow any state to choose what political speech is acceptable and censor speech in the name of ‘misinformation.’ That censorship is both undemocratic and unnecessary.” Hawaii follows California, which lost a similar fight against the Bee. Minnesota’s version is still being litigated before the full 8th Circuit. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Hawaii To Pay Up After Trying to Criminalize Political Memes appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Florida Pays $485K to Biologist Fired Over Charlie Kirk Post
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Florida Pays $485K to Biologist Fired Over Charlie Kirk Post

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. A Florida state biologist reposted a satirical meme about Charlie Kirk on her private Instagram story. The state fired her. Now it’s paying $485,000 to settle her First Amendment lawsuit. The case is a genuinely interesting test of how far government employee speech protections extend and the way the courts analyzed it tells you a lot about where the legal lines are drawn, how easily those lines can be manipulated, and why the current framework leaves government workers more exposed than most people realize. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission will pay Brittney Brown $485,000 after terminating her last September for sharing a post from a parody whale account following the assassination of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk. The post came at a time of mass grieving and read: “the whales are deeply saddened to learn of the shooting of charlie kirk, haha just kidding, they care exactly as much as charlie kirk cared about children being shot in their classrooms, which is to say, not at all.” Whatever you think of the post itself, the legal question is what makes this case worth examining. Brown was a shorebird biologist. She shared the meme on a private account, outside of work hours, about a subject entirely unrelated to her job monitoring imperiled seabirds at Tyndall Air Force Base. The court found, without much hesitation, that her speech was constitutionally protected on two of the three prongs of the government employee speech test. The third prong is where things get complicated and where the broader doctrinal problem lives. Brown’s settlement, announced May 21, breaks down to $40,000 in back wages, $235,000 in compensatory damages, and $210,000 in attorneys’ fees and costs. The agency also agreed to provide a neutral employment reference and to let Brown continue her conservation work through partner organizations. Brown, for her part, resigned and agreed not to seek reemployment at FWC. We obtained a copy of the settlement notice for you here. How the firing happened Kirk was shot and killed on September 10, 2025, at a Turning Point USA event on the campus of Utah Valley University in Orem. Brown reposted the whale meme to her private Instagram story shortly afterward. FWC fired her soon after. In her statement about the settlement, Brown said: “All I wanted was my job back. I see no leaders amongst FWC ‘leadership,’ but that’s to be expected when a state agency becomes the governor’s personal puppet show. The ‘Free State of Florida’ only provides First Amendment protections to those in favor with the current administration, while the rest of us are expected to fall in line or risk losing our livelihoods.” She added: “FWC would rather send an official to make a fraudulent, defamatory statement in federal court than admit any wrongdoing. This administration would rather spend Floridians’ tax dollars to line the pockets of the governor’s chosen law firms than admit they made a poor, politically motivated decision.” The state lied about the disruption, and a federal judge noticed FWC’s defense rested on the claim that Brown’s post caused major operational disruption and generated hundreds of formal complaints. There’s no doubt that Brown’s post caused public uproar but this is the standard playbook for government employers trying to justify firing someone over speech: argue that the speech caused so much controversy that keeping the employee on was untenable. Melissa Tucker, Brown’s supervisor and FWC’s Habitat and Species Conservation Director, submitted a declaration to the court alleging exactly that. Discovery told a different story. The agency received approximately 50 complaints, not hundreds, and most of those never even reached the people who made the decision to fire Brown. US District Judge Mark Walker imposed sanctions on Tucker and the defense law firm, Lawson Huck Gonzalez, for continuing to defend Tucker’s false statements even after her deposition made clear she lacked the personal knowledge to make them. Walker’s order was this: “There is a label for what Ms. Tucker did — making false statements. And there is a label for what defense counsel has done — vexatious litigation.” The sanctions order also noted that Tucker herself didn’t make the firing decision. FWC Executive Director Roger Young ordered it. Tucker carried it out, then went to court and inflated the justification. The case for Brown was strong, and the state knew it Government employee speech cases turn on three questions. Was the employee speaking as a private citizen, not as part of her job? Was the speech about a matter of public concern? And did the employee’s free speech interest outweigh the employer’s interest in running its operations? Judge Walker found the first two weren’t even close. Brown was speaking as a private citizen, on her own time, on a private account, about a subject that had nothing to do with monitoring shorebirds. She was commenting on gun policy and a public figure’s stated position on it. The court noted that reposting someone else’s content counts as your own speech, that satire and sarcasm are protected, and that “the inappropriate or controversial character of a statement is irrelevant to the question whether it deals with a matter of public concern.” The precedent the court relied on tells you how strong Brown’s position was. In Rankin v. McPherson (1987), the Supreme Court protected a government employee who told a coworker, after hearing about an assassination attempt on the president, that she hoped the next attempt would succeed. That’s arguably more inflammatory than reposting a satirical whale meme. If wishing for a successful presidential assassination qualifies as protected speech on a matter of public concern, a sarcastic repost about a political commentator’s death would be well within the line. The only question that gave the court pause was the third prong: whether Brown’s speech interest outweighed the disruption to FWC. At the preliminary injunction stage in November 2025, the court couldn’t rule in her favor because Tucker’s false declaration about hundreds of complaints went unrebutted. Brown’s legal team hadn’t sought expedited discovery to challenge it at that point. Discovery changed everything. Once the court could see that Tucker’s claims were fabricated, the state’s defense collapsed and a trial was set for June 2026. The settlement came through on May 18, just weeks before that trial date. The $485,000 payout tells you something about where the state thought this was headed. If FWC genuinely believed the disruption to its operations justified the firing, you’d expect it to go to trial. Instead, the agency settled for nearly half a million dollars after its key witness was sanctioned for lying and its defense firm was sanctioned for vexatious litigation. We obtained a copy of the settlement notice for you here. What the settlements don’t fix The structural problem remains. Government employees can still be fired for speech that causes enough public backlash and the test still gives organized campaigns a mechanism to manufacture the disruption that justifies the firing. Courts still weigh “disruption to the employer” without distinguishing between disruption caused by the speaker and disruption caused by people who want the speaker punished. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Florida Pays $485K to Biologist Fired Over Charlie Kirk Post appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

South Carolina’s New Social Media Law Puts Every User Under Age Surveillance
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South Carolina’s New Social Media Law Puts Every User Under Age Surveillance

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster signed H.B. 4591 on May 19, turning the Stop Harm from Addictive Social Media Act into a law that will reshape how every resident of the state uses major social media platforms. The bill passed with almost no opposition, clearing the House 115-0 and the Senate 42-1. It takes effect January 1, 2027, and it brings with it a surveillance apparatus aimed at all users. We obtained a copy of the bill for you here. The law, sponsored by Rep. Brandon Guffey (R-York), requires covered platforms to repeatedly estimate and verify the age of every South Carolina account holder. The stated goal is child protection. The way it claims to do that is continuous behavioral analysis of anyone who spends enough time on a platform, combined with escalating confidence thresholds and penalties of ten thousand dollars per violation if platforms get it wrong. Here’s how the age estimation system works. Once an account holder hits 25 cumulative hours on a platform within six months (the “first trigger date”), the platform has 14 days to estimate whether that person is over 15, with 80% confidence. At 50 hours (the “second trigger date”), the confidence requirement jumps to 90%. After that, the platform must update its estimate every 100 hours of use, or whenever it runs data analytics on the user for any other reason, whichever comes sooner. That last clause is easy to miss and it means any time a platform runs its profiling algorithms on you for ad targeting, content recommendations, or anything else, it also has to re-evaluate your estimated age. The law essentially piggybacks mandatory age surveillance onto whatever commercial surveillance platforms already conduct, expanding the scope of both. Because platforms face significant liability if they can’t meet these confidence thresholds, the law creates powerful incentives to harvest far more sensitive data about users than they do today, including about minors. A platform that guesses wrong faces $10,000 per violation. A platform that overinvests in behavioral profiling to avoid those fines faces no penalty at all. The incentive structure points in one direction. The bill claims it “does not create any duty on the part of a covered social media platform to request, collect, or retain any information from or about any account holder” and that age estimates must be “derived based on information collected and retained by the covered social media platform in the ordinary course of operation.” This is the bill’s central fiction. Platforms that can’t achieve 80% or 90% confidence from existing data will need to collect more data, or face financial ruin from accumulated violations. The law doesn’t mandate new data collection in the same way that holding a knife to your wallet doesn’t mandate you hand over cash. For users classified as children (under 16), the restrictions are extensive. Accounts require verifiable parental consent, with privacy settings locked to the most restrictive levels by default. Platforms cannot show children profile-based feeds, profile-based advertising, or any “addictive interface features,” a category that includes infinite scrolling, auto-play video, push notifications, and display of personal metrics like reaction counts. The verifiable parental consent requirement will force the collection of sensitive personal information from both minors and their parents. Documents that conclusively establish a user’s age and parental relationship are almost always government-issued identification. The bill demands platforms retain documentation proving they obtained valid consent. So a law sold as protecting children’s data will, in reality, build databases of children’s and parents’ government IDs, held by the same tech companies the bill treats as untrustworthy. If a user disputes being classified as a child, the platform can “rely on any commercially reasonable age verification process to resolve the dispute.” The bill doesn’t define what counts as commercially reasonable. Government ID uploads, facial recognition scans, and financial record checks could all qualify. The user who objects to being profiled as a minor gets to choose which form of identity verification they’d prefer to submit to, not whether they submit at all. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post South Carolina’s New Social Media Law Puts Every User Under Age Surveillance appeared first on Reclaim The Net.