Syllabus
MOODY, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF FLORIDA, et al.
v. NETCHOICE, LLC, dba NETCHOICE, et al.
certiorari to the united states court of appeals for the eleventh circuit No. 22–277. Argued February 26, 2024—Decided July 1, 2024* In 2021, Florida and Texas enacted statutes regulating large social-media companies and other internet platforms. The States' laws differ in the entities they cover and the activities they limit. But both curtail the platforms' capacity to engage in content moderation—to flter, prioritize, and label the varied third-party messages, videos, and other content their users wish to post.
Both laws also include individualized- explanation provisions, requiring a platform to give reasons to a user if it removes or alters her posts.
NetChoice LLC and the Computer & Communications Industry Association (collectively, NetChoice)—trade associations whose members include Facebook and YouTube—brought facial First Amendment challenges against the two laws. District courts in both States entered preliminary injunctions.
The Eleventh Circuit upheld the injunction of Florida's law, as to all provisions relevant here. The court held that the State's restrictions on content moderation trigger First Amendment scrutiny under this Court's cases protecting “editorial discretion.” 34 F. 4th 1196, 1209, 1216. The court then concluded that the content-moderation provisions are unlikely to survive heightened scrutiny. Id., at 1227–1228. Similarly, the Eleventh Circuit thought the statute's individualized- explanation requirements likely to fall. Relying on Zauderer v. Offce of Disciplinary Counsel of Supreme Court of Ohio, 471 U. S. 626, the court held that the obligation to explain “millions of [decisions] per day” is “unduly burdensome and likely to chill platforms' protected speech.” 34 F. 4th, at 1230.
The Fifth Circuit disagreed across the board, and so reversed the preliminary injunction of the Texas law. In that court's view, the platforms' content-moderation activities are “not speech” at all, and so do not implicate the First Amendment. 49 F. 4th 439, 466, 494. But even if those activities were expressive, the court determined the State could *Together with No. 22–555, NetChoice, LLC, dba NetChoice, et al. v. Paxton, Attorney General of Texas, on certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC regulate them to advance its interest in “protecting a diversity of ideas.”
Id., at 482.
The court further held that the statute's individualized-explanation provisions would likely survive, even assuming the platforms were engaged in speech. It found no undue burden under Zauderer because the platforms needed only to “scale up” a “complaint-and-appeal process” they already used. 49 F. 4th, at 487. Held: The judgments are vacated, and the cases are remanded, because neither the Eleventh Circuit nor the Fifth Circuit conducted a proper analysis of the facial First Amendment challenges to Florida and Texas laws regulating large internet platforms. Pp. 723–745.
(a) NetChoice's decision to litigate these cases as facial challenges comes at a cost. The Court has made facial challenges hard to win. In the First Amendment context, a plaintiff must show that “a substantial number of [the law's] applications are unconstitutional, judged in relation to the statute's plainly legitimate sweep.” Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta, 594 U. S. 595, 615.
So far in these cases, no one has paid much attention to that issue. Analysis and arguments below focused mainly on how the laws applied to the content-moderation practices that giant social-media platforms use on their best-known services to flter, alter, or label their users' posts, i. e., on how the laws applied to the likes of Facebook's News Feed and YouTube's homepage. They did not address the full range of activities the laws cover, and measure the constitutional against the unconstitutional applications.
The proper analysis begins with an assessment of the state laws' scope. The laws appear to apply beyond Facebook's News Feed and its ilk. But it's not clear to what extent, if at all, they affect social-media giants' other services, like direct messaging, or what they have to say about other platforms and functions. And before a court can do anything else with these facial challenges, it must “determine what [the law] covers.” United States v. Hansen, 599 U. S. 762, 770. The next order of business is to decide which of the laws' applications violate the First Amendment, and to measure them against the rest. For the content-moderation provisions, that means asking, as to every covered platform or function, whether there is an intrusion on protected editorial discretion. And for the individualized-explanation provisions, it means asking, again as to each thing covered, whether the required disclosures unduly burden expression. See Zauderer, 471 U. S., at 651. Because this is “a court of review, not of frst view,” Cutter v. Wilkin son, 544 U. S. 709, 718, n. 7, this Court cannot undertake the needed inquiries. And because neither the Eleventh nor the Fifth Circuit perPage Proof Pending Publication formed the facial analysis in the way described above, their decisions must be vacated and the cases remanded. Pp. 723–726.
(b) It is necessary to say more about how the First Amendment relates to the laws' content-moderation provisions, to ensure that the facial analysis proceeds on the right path in the courts below. That need is especially stark for the Fifth Circuit, whose decision rested on a serious misunderstanding of First Amendment precedent and principle. Pp. 726–743.
(1) The Court has repeatedly held that ordering a party to provide a forum for someone else's views implicates the First Amendment if, though only if, the regulated party is engaged in its own expressive activity, which the mandated access would alter or disrupt. First, in Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U. S. 241, the Court held that a Florida law requiring a newspaper to give a political candidate a right to reply to critical coverage interfered with the newspaper's “exercise of editorial control and judgment.” Id., at 243, 258. Florida could not, the Court explained, override the newspaper's decisions about the “content of the paper” and “[t]he choice of material to go into” it, because that would substitute “governmental regulation” for the “crucial process” of editorial choice. Id., at 258. The next case, Pacifc Gas & Elec. Co. v. Public Util. Comm'n of Cal., 475 U. S. 1, involved California's attempt to force a private utility to include material from a certain consumer-advocacy group in its regular newsletter to consumers. The Court held that an interest in “offer[ing] the public a greater variety of views” could not justify compelling the utility “to carry speech with which it disagreed” and thus to “alter its own message.” Id., at 11, n. 7, 12, 16. Then in Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 512 U. S. 622, the Court considered federal “must-carry” rules, which required cable operators to allocate certain channels to local broadcast stations. The Court had no doubt the First Amendment was implicated, because the rules “interfere[d]” with the cable operators' “editorial discretion over which stations or programs to include in [their] repertoire.” Id., at 636, 643–644. The capstone of this line of precedents, Hurley v. Irish- American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc., 515 U. S. 557, held that the First Amendment prevented Massachusetts from compelling parade organizers to admit as a participant a gay and lesbian group seeking to convey a message of “pride.” Id., at 561. It held that ordering the group's admittance would “alter the expressive content of the[ ] parade,” and that the decision to exclude the group's message was the organizers' alone. Id., at 572–574.
From that slew of individual cases, three general points emerge. First, the First Amendment offers protection when an entity engaged Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC in compiling and curating others' speech into an expressive product of its own is directed to accommodate messages it would prefer to exclude. Second, none of that changes just because a compiler includes most items and excludes just a few. It “is enough” for the compiler to exclude the handful of messages it most “disfavor[s].” Id., at 574. Third, the government cannot get its way just by asserting an interest in better balancing the marketplace of ideas. In case after case, the Court has barred the government from forcing a private speaker to present views it wished to spurn in order to rejigger the expressive realm. Pp. 727–733.
(2) “[W]hatever the challenges of applying the Constitution to ever- advancing technology, the basic principles” of the First Amendment “do not vary.” Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Assn., 564 U. S. 786, 790. And the principles elaborated in the above-summarized decisions establish that Texas is not likely to succeed in enforcing its law against the platforms' application of their content-moderation policies to their main feeds.
Facebook's News Feed and YouTube's homepage present users with a continually updating, personalized stream of other users' posts. The key to the scheme is prioritization of content, achieved through algorithms. The selection and ranking is most often based on a user's expressed interests and past activities, but it may also be based on other factors, including the platform's preferences. Facebook's Community Standards and YouTube's Community Guidelines detail the messages and videos that the platforms disfavor. The platforms write algorithms to implement those standards—for example, to prefer content deemed particularly trustworthy or to suppress content viewed as deceptive. Beyond ranking content, platforms may add labels, to give users additional context. And they also remove posts entirely that contain prohibited subjects or messages, such as pornography, hate speech, and misinformation on certain topics. The platforms thus unabashedly control the content that will appear to users.
Texas's law, though, limits their power to do so. Its central provision prohibits covered platforms from “censor[ing]” a “user's expression” based on the “viewpoint” it contains. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 143A.002(a)(2). The platforms thus cannot do any of the things they typically do (on their main feeds) to posts they disapprove—cannot demote, label, or remove them—whenever the action is based on the post's viewpoint. That limitation profoundly alters the platforms' choices about the views they convey.
The Court has repeatedly held that type of regulation to interfere with protected speech. Like the editors, cable operators, and parade organizers this Court has previously considered, the major social-media Page Proof Pending Publication platforms curate their feeds by combining “multifarious voices” to create a distinctive expressive offering. Hurley, 515 U. S., at 569. Their choices about which messages are appropriate give the feed a particular expressive quality and “constitute the exercise” of protected “editorial control.” Tornillo, 418 U. S., at 258. And the Texas law targets those expressive choices by forcing the platforms to present and promote content on their feeds that they regard as objectionable.
That those platforms happily convey the lion's share of posts submitted to them makes no signifcant First Amendment difference. In Hurley, the Court held that the parade organizers' “lenient” admissions policy did “not forfeit” their right to reject the few messages they found harmful or offensive. 515 U. S., at 569. Similarly here, that Facebook and YouTube convey a mass of messages does not license Texas to prohibit them from deleting posts they disfavor. Pp. 733–740. (3) The interest Texas relies on cannot sustain its law. In the usual First Amendment case, the Court must decide whether to apply strict or intermediate scrutiny. But here, Texas's law does not pass even the less stringent form of review. Under that standard, a law must further a “substantial governmental interest” that is “unrelated to the suppression of free expression.” United States v. O'Brien, 391 U. S. 367, 377. Many possible interests relating to social media can meet that test. But Texas's asserted interest relates to the suppression of free expression, and it is not valid, let alone substantial. Texas has never been shy, and always been consistent, about its interest: The objective is to correct the mix of viewpoints that major platforms present. But a State may not interfere with private actors' speech to advance its own vision of ideological balance. States (and their citizens) are of course right to want an expressive realm in which the public has access to a wide range of views. But the way the First Amendment achieves that goal is by preventing the government from “tilt[ing] public debate in a preferred direction,” Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc., 564 U. S. 552, 578–579, not by licensing the government to stop private actors from speaking as they wish and preferring some views over others. A State cannot prohibit speech to rebalance the speech market. That unadorned interest is not “unrelated to the suppression of free expression.” And Texas may not pursue it consistent with the First Amendment. Pp. 740–743.
No. 22–277, 34 F. 4th 1196; No. 22–555, 49 F. 4th 439, vacated and remanded.
and Sotomayor, Kavanaugh, and Barrett, JJ., joined in full, and in which Jackson, J., joined as to Parts I, II, and III–A. Barrett, J., fled MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC a concurring opinion, post, p. 745. Jackson, J., fled an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, post, p. 748. Thomas, J., fled an opinion concurring in the judgment, post, p. 749. Alito, J., fled an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which Thomas and Gorsuch, JJ., joined, post, p. 766.
Henry C. Whitaker, Solicitor General of Florida, argued the cause for petitioners in No. 22–277. With him on the briefs were Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Daniel W. Bell and Jeffrey Paul DeSousa, Chief Deputy Solicitors General, Christopher J. Baum, Senior Deputy Solicitor General, Kevin A. Golembiewski and Evan Ezray, Deputy Solicitors General, Darrick W. Monson and Alison E. Preston, Assistant Solicitors General, Charles J. Cooper, David H. Thomp son, Brian W. Barnes, and John D. Ohlendorf.
Paul D. Clement argued the cause for respondents in No. 22–277 and petitioners in No. 22–555. With him on the briefs in both cases were Erin E. Murphy and James Y. Xi. With him on the briefs in No. 22–555 were Scott A. Keller and Steven P. Lehotsky.
Solicitor General Prelogar argued the cause for the United States as amicus curiae urging affrmance in No. 22– 277 and reversal in No. 22–555. With her on the brief were Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Boynton, Deputy Solicitor General Fletcher, Colleen E. Roh Sinzdak, Mark R. Freeman, Daniel Tenny, and Daniel Winik.
Aaron L. Nielson, Solicitor General of Texas, argued the cause for respondent in No. 22–555. With him on the brief were Ken Paxton, Attorney General, Lanora C. Pettit, Principal Deputy Solicitor General, Michael R. Abrams and William F. Cole, Assistant Solicitors General, Coy Allen Westbrook, Assistant Attorney General, Brent Webster, First Assistant Attorney General, and Ryan S. Baasch, Chief, Consumer Protection Division.† †Briefs of amici curiae urging reversal in No. 22–277 and affrmance in No. 22–555 were fled in both cases for American Principles Project by Theodore M. Cooperstein; for Amicus Populi by Mitchell Keiter; for the Babylon Bee, LLC, et al. by Patrick Strawbridge, Kelly J. Shackelford, Page Proof Pending Publication Justice Kagan delivered the opinion of the Court.‡ Not even thirty years ago, this Court felt the need to explain to the opinion-reading public that the “Internet is an Jeffrey C. Mateer, David J. Hacker, and Jeremiah G. Dys; for the Heartland Institute by James R. Lawrence III; for iTexasPolitics, LLC, dba The Texan, et al. by Evan M. Goldberg; for Legal Scholars Adam Candeub et al. by Kenneth J. Weatherwax and Gregory R. Smith; for The Rutherford Institute by John W. Whitehead; for the World Faith Foundation by James L. Hirsen and Deborah J. Dewart; and for Eric Rasmusen by James Bopp, Jr.
Briefs of amici curiae urging affrmance in No. 22–277 and reversal in No. 22–555 were fled in both cases for the American Jewish Committee by Michael J. Gottlieb and Aaron E. Nathan; for the Americans for Prosperity Foundation by Cynthia Fleming Crawford; for Article 19: Global Campaign for Free Expression et al. by Megan Coker and Kelli Bills; for the Cato Institute by Thomas A. Berry and Anastasia P. Boden; for the Center for Democracy & Technology by Andrew J. Pincus; for the Center for Growth and Opportunity et al. by Andrew C. Nichols; for the Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America by Michael R. Dreeben and Jennifer B. Dickey; for Chamber of Progress et al. by Mark W. Brennan and Joseph S. Miller; for the Developers Alliance et al. by Ari Holtzblatt and Hannah E. Gelbort; for Discord Inc. by Rebecca Tushnet; for Engine Advocacy by Benjamin W. Berkowitz; for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression by Robert Corn-Revere and Abigail E. Smith; for the International Center for Law & Economics by Constance H. Pfeiffer and Jason LaFond; for the Internet Society by Raechel Keay Kummer and James D. Nelson; for the Liberty Justice Center by Jacob Huebert and M. E. Buck Dougherty III; for the Media Law Resource Center, Inc., by George Freeman; for Professors of History by Theodore J. Boutrous, Jr., and Lee R. Crain; for Protect the First Foundation by Gene C. Schaerr, H. Christopher Bartolomucci, and Hannah C. Smith; for Public Knowledge by John Bergmayer; for the Reason Foundation et al. by Erik S. Jaffe; for Reddit, Inc., by Michael R. Huston; for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press et al. by Bruce D. Brown and David D. Cole; for TechFreedom by Corbin K. Barthold; for the Trust & Safety Foundation by Ian C. Ballon, Lori Chang, and Bethany J. M. Pandher; for the Washington Legal Foundation by John M. Masslon II and Cory L. An drews; for the Wikimedia Foundation by Kathleen R. Hartnett and Adam Gershenson; for Yelp Inc. by Anna-Rose Mathieson and Jocelyn Sperling; for Sen. Ben Ray Luján by J. Michael Showalter and Bradley S. Rochlen; [Footnote ‡ is on page 716] Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC international network of interconnected computers.” Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, 521 U. S. 844, 849 (1997). Things have changed since then. At the time, only 40 million people used the internet. See id., at 850. Today, Face- for Christopher S. Yoo, pro se; and in No. 22–277 for the PEN American Center et al. by Lynn B. Oberlander, Joseph Slaughter, and Maxwell S. Mishkin. Jean-Paul Jassy and Michael A. Cheah fled a brief for Internet Works et al. as amici curiae urging affrmance in No. 22–277 and vacatur in No. 22–555.
Eric A. Hudson fled a brief for Keep the Republic as amicus curiae urging vacatur in both cases.
Briefs of amici curiae were fled in both cases for the State of Missouri et al. by Andrew Bailey, Attorney General of Missouri, Joshua M. Divine, Solicitor General, Maria A. Lanahan, Deputy Solicitor General, and Caleb Rutledge and Bryce Beal, Assistant Attorneys General, by Dave Yost, Attorney General of Ohio, Michael Hendershot, Chief Deputy Solicitor General, Nicholas Cordova, Deputy Solicitor General, by Rusty D. Crandell and Linley Wilson, and by the Attorneys General for their respective States as follows: Steve Marshall of Alabama, Treg Taylor of Alaska, Tim Griffn of Arkansas, Brenna Bird of Iowa, Russell Coleman of Kentucky, Liz Murrill of Louisiana, Lynn Fitch of Mississippi, Austin Knudsen of Montana, Michael T. Hilgers of Nebraska, John M. Formella of New Hampshire, Drew H. Wrigley of North Dakota, Gentner Drummond of Oklahoma, Alan Wilson of South Carolina, Marty Jackley of South Dakota, Jonathan Skrmetti of Tennessee, Sean D. Reyes of Utah, and Jason Miy ares of Virginia; for the State of New York et al. by Letitia James, Attorney General of New York, Barbara D. Underwood, Solicitor General, Ester Murdukhayeva, Deputy Solicitor General, and Sarah Coco, Assistant Solicitor General, and by the Attorneys General for their respective jurisdictions as follows: Kris Mayes of Arizona, Rob Bonta of California, Philip J. Weiser of Colorado, William Tong of Connecticut, Kathleen Jennings of Delaware, Brian L. Schwalb of the District of Columbia, Anne E. Lopez of Hawaii, Kwame Raoul of Illinois, Aaron M. Frey of Maine, Anthony G. Brown of Maryland, Andrea Joy Campbell of Massachusetts, Dana Nessel of Michigan, Keith Ellison of Minnesota, Aaron D. Ford of Nevada, Mat thew J. Platkin of New Jersey, Joshua H. Stein of North Carolina, Ellen F. Rosenblum of Oregon, Peter F. Neronha of Rhode Island, Charity R. Clark of Vermont, Robert W. Ferguson of Washington, and Joshua L. Kaul of Wisconsin; for the American Center for Law and Justice by Jay Alan Sekulow, Stuart J. Roth, Jordan A. Sekulow, Colby M. May, Craig L. Parshall, and Walter M. Weber; for the Anti-Defamation League by Steven Page Proof Pending Publication book and YouTube alone have over two billion users each. See App. in No. 22–555, p. 67a. And the public likely no longer needs this Court to defne the internet.
M. Freeman; for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty by Eric C. Rass bach and Mark L. Rienzi; for Bluesky et al. by Catherine R. Gellis; for the Center for American Liberty by Randall W. Miller and Harmeet K. Dhillon; for the Center for Business and Human Rights of the Leonard N. Stern School of Business at New York University by Timothy K. Gil- man; for the Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence by John C. Eastman and Anthony T. Caso; for the Center for Social Media and Politics at New York University et al. by Jacob M. Karr and Jason M. Schultz; for Children's Health Defense by Mary Holland; for the Digital Progress Institute by Joel Thayer; for Economists by Jennifer B. Tatel; for the Electronic Frontier Foundation et al. by David Greene, Thomas S. Leatherbury, and Christopher Hopkins; for the Electronic Privacy Information Center by Alan Butler; for First Amendment and Internet Law Scholars by G. S. Hans; for the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence et al. by Douglas N. Letter, Shira Lauren Feldman, and Kelly M. Percival; for the Goldwater Institute by Timothy Sandefur; for the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University by Scott Wilkens, Ramya Krish nan, Alex Abdo, and Jameel Jaffer; for the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law by Damon Hewitt, Jon Greenbaum, Dariely Rodri guez, David Brody, Marc Epstein, Christopher M. Mason, and Seth A. Horvath; for the Marketplace Industry Association et al. by Eric B. Wolff; for the Moderators of r/law and r/SCOTUS by Gabriel Latner; for Moms for Liberty et al. by Alan Gura and Endel Kolde; for National Security Experts by Mary B. McCord, pro se, Rupa Bhattacharyya, Kelsi Brown Corkran, and Christopher J. Wright; for the National Taxpayers Union Foundation by Tyler Martinez; for the Open Markets Institute by Jay L. Himes; for Former Representative Christopher Cox et al. by David M. Gossett, Adam S. Sieff, and Ambika Kumar; for Francis Fukuyama by Seth D. Greenstein and Robert S. Schwartz; for Eric Goldman by Michael S. Kwun; and for Richard L. Hasen et al. by Richard L. Hasen, pro se. Richard Polk Lawson, Jessica Hart Steinmann, and John P. Coale fled a brief for Donald J. Trump as amicus curiae in No. 22–277. Lawrence J. Spiwak fled a brief for Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies urging reversal in No. 22–555. Briefs of amici curiae urging affrmance in No. 22–555 were fled for Law and History Scholars by Glenn E. Chappell, Hassan A. Zavareei, and Katherine Van Dyck; for the Life Legal Defense Foundation by Catherine Short and Sheila A. Green; for Students at Columbia Against Censorship MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC These years have brought a dizzying transformation in how people communicate, and with it a raft of public policy issues. Social-media platforms, as well as other websites, have gone from unheard-of to inescapable. They structure how we relate to family and friends, as well as to businesses, civic organizations, and governments. The novel services they offer make our lives better, and make them worse— create unparalleled opportunities and unprecedented dangers. The questions of whether, when, and how to regulate online entities, and in particular the social-media giants, are understandably on the front-burner of many legislatures and agencies. And those government actors will generally be better positioned than courts to respond to the emerging challenges social-media entities pose.
But courts still have a necessary role in protecting those entities' rights of speech, as courts have historically protected traditional media's rights. To the extent that social- media platforms create expressive products, they receive the First Amendment's protection. And although these cases are here in a preliminary posture, the current record suggests that some platforms, in at least some functions, are indeed engaged in expression. In constructing certain feeds, those platforms make choices about what third-party speech to display and how to display it. They include and exclude, organize and prioritize—and in making millions of those decisions each day, produce their own distinctive compilations of expression. And while much about social media is new, the essence of that project is something this Court by Marc A. Greendorfer; for Philip Hamburger by Jonathan F. Mitchell; for Sen. Josh Hawley, pro se; and for David Mamet by Marc A. Greendorfer.
Briefs of amici curiae urging affrmance in No. 22–555 were fled in both cases for the Center for Renewing America by Richard A. Epstein; for Donald W. Landry by Joel B. Ard; and for Christos A. Makridis by Jonathan S. Goldstein and Shawn M. Rodgers.
‡Justice Jackson joins Parts I, II, and III–A of this opinion. Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication has seen before. Traditional publishers and editors also select and shape other parties' expression into their own curated speech products. And we have repeatedly held that laws curtailing their editorial choices must meet the First Amendment's requirements. The principle does not change because the curated compilation has gone from the physical to the virtual world. In the latter, as in the former, government efforts to alter an edited compilation of third-party expression are subject to judicial review for compliance with the First Amendment.
Today, we consider whether two state laws regulating social-media platforms and other websites facially violate the First Amendment. The laws, from Florida and Texas, restrict the ability of social-media platforms to control whether and how third-party posts are presented to other users. Or otherwise put, the laws limit the platforms' capacity to engage in content moderation—to flter, prioritize, and label the varied messages, videos, and other content their users wish to post. In addition, though far less addressed in this Court, the laws require a platform to provide an individualized explanation to a user if it removes or alters her posts. NetChoice, an internet trade association, challenged both laws on their face—as a whole, rather than as to particular applications. The cases come to us at an early stage, on review of preliminary injunctions. The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit upheld such an injunction, fnding that the Florida law was not likely to survive First Amendment review. The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed a similar injunction, primarily reasoning that the Texas law does not regulate any speech and so does not implicate the First Amendment.
Today, we vacate both decisions for reasons separate from the First Amendment merits, because neither Court of Appeals properly considered the facial nature of NetChoice's challenge. The courts mainly addressed what the parties had focused on. And the parties mainly argued these cases MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC as if the laws applied only to the curated feeds offered by the largest and most paradigmatic social-media platforms— as if, say, each case presented an as-applied challenge brought by Facebook protesting its loss of control over the content of its News Feed. But argument in this Court revealed that the laws might apply to, and differently affect, other kinds of websites and apps. In a facial challenge, that could well matter, even when the challenge is brought under the First Amendment. As explained below, the question in such a case is whether a law's unconstitutional applications are substantial compared to its constitutional ones. To make that judgment, a court must determine a law's full set of applications, evaluate which are constitutional and which are not, and compare the one to the other. Neither court performed that necessary inquiry.
To do that right, of course, a court must understand what kind of government actions the First Amendment prohibits. We therefore set out the relevant constitutional principles, and explain how one of the Courts of Appeals failed to follow them. Contrary to what the Fifth Circuit thought, the current record indicates that the Texas law does regulate speech when applied in the way the parties focused on below—when applied, that is, to prevent Facebook (or YouTube) from using its content-moderation standards to remove, alter, organize, prioritize, or disclaim posts in its News Feed (or homepage). The law then prevents exactly the kind of editorial judgments this Court has previously held to receive First Amendment protection. It prevents a platform from compiling the third-party speech it wants in the way it wants, and thus from offering the expressive product that most refects its own views and priorities. Still more, the law— again, in that specifc application—is unlikely to withstand First Amendment scrutiny. Texas has thus far justifed the law as necessary to balance the mix of speech on Facebook's News Feed and similar platforms; and the record refects that Texas offcials passed it because they thought those Page Proof Pending Publication feeds skewed against politically conservative voices. But this Court has many times held, in many contexts, that it is no job for government to decide what counts as the right balance of private expression—to “un-bias” what it thinks biased, rather than to leave such judgments to speakers and their audiences. That principle works for social-media platforms as it does for others.
In sum, there is much work to do below on both these cases, given the facial nature of NetChoice's challenges. But that work must be done consistent with the First Amendment, which does not go on leave when social media are involved.
I
As commonly understood, the term “social media platforms” typically refers to websites and mobile apps that allow users to upload content—messages, pictures, videos, and so on—to share with others. Those viewing the content can then react to it, comment on it, or share it themselves. The biggest social-media companies—entities like Facebook and YouTube—host a staggering amount of content. Facebook users, for example, share more than 100 billion messages every day. See App. in No. 22–555, at 67a. And YouTube sees more than 500 hours of video uploaded every minute. See ibid.
In the face of that deluge, the major platforms cull and organize uploaded posts in a variety of ways. A user does not see everything—even everything from the people she follows—in reverse-chronological order. The platforms will have removed some content entirely; ranked or otherwise prioritized what remains; and sometimes added warnings or labels. Of particular relevance here, Facebook and YouTube make some of those decisions in conformity with content- moderation policies they call Community Standards and Community Guidelines. Those rules list the subjects or messages the platform prohibits or discourages—say, pornography, hate speech, or misinformation on select topics. Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC The rules thus lead Facebook and YouTube to remove, disfavor, or label various posts based on their content.
In 2021, Florida and Texas enacted statutes regulating internet platforms, including the large social-media companies just mentioned. The States' laws differ in the entities they cover and the activities they limit. But both contain content-moderation provisions, restricting covered platforms' choices about whether and how to display user- generated content to the public.
And both include individualized-explanation provisions, requiring platforms to give reasons for particular content-moderation choices. Florida's law regulates “social media platforms,” as defned expansively, that have annual gross revenue of over $100 million or more than 100 million monthly active users. Fla. Stat. § 501.2041(1)(g) (2023).1 The statute restricts varied ways of “censor[ing]” or otherwise disfavoring posts—including deleting, altering, labeling, or deprioritizing them—based on their content or source. § 501.2041(1)(b). For example, the law prohibits a platform from taking those actions against “a journalistic enterprise based on the content of its publication or broadcast.” §501.2041(2)(j). Similarly, the law prevents deprioritizing posts by or about political candidates. See § 501.2041(2)(h). And the law requires platforms to apply their content-moderation practices to users “in a consistent manner.” § 501.2041(2)(b).
In addition, the Florida law mandates that a platform provide an explanation to a user any time it removes or alters any of her posts. See § 501.2041(2)(d)(1). The requisite notice must be delivered within seven days, and contain both a “thorough rationale” for the action and an account of how the platform became aware of the targeted material. § 501.2041(3). 1The defnition of “social-media platforms” covers “any information service, system, Internet search engine, or access software provider” that “[p]rovides or enables computer access by multiple users to a computer server, including an Internet platform or a social media site.” Fla. Stat. § 501.2041(1)(g)(1).
Page Proof Pending Publication The Texas law regulates any social-media platform, having over 50 million monthly active users, that allows its users “to communicate with other users for the primary purpose of posting information, comments, messages, or images.” Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. §§ 120.001(1), 120.002(b) (West 2023).2 With several exceptions, the statute prevents platforms from “censor[ing]” a user or a user's expression based on viewpoint. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann.
§§ 143A.002(a), 143A.006 (West Cum. Supp. 2023). That ban on “censor[ing]” covers any action to “block, ban, remove, deplatform, demonetize, de-boost, restrict, deny equal access or visibility to, or otherwise discriminate against expression.” § 143A.001(1). The statute also requires that “concurrently with the removal” of user content, the platform shall “notify the user” and “explain the reason the content was removed.” § 120.103(a)(1). The user gets a right of appeal, and the platform must address an appeal within 14 days. See §§ 120.103(a)(2), 120.104.
Soon after Florida and Texas enacted those statutes, Net- Choice LLC and the Computer & Communications Industry Association (collectively, NetChoice)—trade associations whose members include Facebook and YouTube—brought facial First Amendment challenges against the two laws. District courts in both States entered preliminary injunctions, halting the laws' enforcement. See 546 F. Supp. 3d 1082, 1096 (ND Fla. 2021); 573 F. Supp. 3d 1092, 1117 (WD Tex. 2021). Each court held that the suit before it is likely to succeed because the statute infringes on the constitutionally protected “editorial judgment” of NetChoice's members about what material they will display. See 546 F. Supp. 3d, at 1090; 573 F. Supp. 3d, at 1107.
2The statute further clarifes that it does not cover internet service providers, email providers, and any online service, website, or app consisting “primarily of news, sports, entertainment, or other information or content that is not user generated but is preselected by the provider.” § 120.001(1).
Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC The Eleventh Circuit upheld the injunction of Florida's law, as to all provisions relevant here. The court held that the State's restrictions on content moderation trigger First Amendment scrutiny under this Court's cases protecting “editorial discretion.” 34 F. 4th 1196, 1209, 1216 (2022). When a social-media platform “removes or deprioritizes a user or post,” the court explained, it makes a “judgment rooted in the platform's own views about the sorts of content and viewpoints that are valuable and appropriate for dissemination.” Id., at 1210. The court concluded that the content-moderation provisions are unlikely to survive “intermediate—let alone strict—scrutiny,” because a State has no legitimate interest in counteracting “private `censorship' ” by “tilt[ing] public debate in a preferred direction.” Id., at 1227–1228. Similarly, the Eleventh Circuit thought the statute's individualized-explanation requirements likely to fall. Applying the standard from Zauderer v. Offce of Disciplinary Counsel of Supreme Court of Ohio, 471 U. S. 626 (1985), the court held that the obligation to explain “millions of [decisions] per day” is “unduly burdensome and likely to chill platforms' protected speech.” 34 F. 4th, at 1230. The Fifth Circuit disagreed across the board, and so reversed the preliminary injunction before it. In that court's view, the platforms' content-moderation activities are “not speech” at all, and so do not implicate the First Amendment. 49 F. 4th 439, 466, 494 (2022). But even if those activities were expressive, the court continued, the State could regulate them to advance its interest in “protecting a diversity of ideas.” Id., at 482 (emphasis deleted). The court further held that the statute's individualized-explanation provisions would likely survive, again even assuming that the platforms were engaged in speech. Those requirements, the court maintained, are not unduly burdensome under Zauderer because the platforms needed only to “scale up” a “complaintand-appeal process” they already used. 49 F. 4th, at 487. Page Proof Pending Publication We granted certiorari to resolve the split between the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits. 600 U. S. ––– (2023).
II
NetChoice chose to litigate these cases as facial challenges, and that decision comes at a cost. For a host of good reasons, courts usually handle constitutional claims case by case, not en masse. See Washington State Grange v. Washing ton State Republican Party, 552 U. S. 442, 450–451 (2008). “Claims of facial invalidity often rest on speculation” about the law's coverage and its future enforcement. Id., at 450. And “facial challenges threaten to short circuit the democratic process” by preventing duly enacted laws from being implemented in constitutional ways.
Id., at 451.
This Court has therefore made facial challenges hard to win. That is true even when a facial suit is based on the First Amendment, although then a different standard applies. In other cases, a plaintiff cannot succeed on a facial challenge unless he “establish[es] that no set of circumstances exists under which the [law] would be valid,” or he shows that the law lacks a “plainly legitimate sweep.” United States v. Sa lerno, 481 U. S. 739, 745 (1987); Washington State Grange, 552 U. S., at 449. In First Amendment cases, however, this Court has lowered that very high bar. To “provide[ ] breathing room for free expression,” we have substituted a less demanding though still rigorous standard. United States v. Hansen, 599 U. S. 762, 769 (2023). The question is whether “a substantial number of [the law's] applications are unconstitutional, judged in relation to the statute's plainly legitimate sweep.” Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta, 594 U. S. 595, 615 (2021); see Hansen, 599 U. S., at 770 (likewise asking whether the law “prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech relative to its plainly legitimate sweep”). So in this singular context, even a law with “a plainly legitimate sweep” may be struck down in its entirety. Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC But that is so only if the law's unconstitutional applications substantially outweigh its constitutional ones.
So far in these cases, no one has paid much attention to that issue. In the lower courts, NetChoice and the States alike treated the laws as having certain heartland applications, and mostly confned their battle to that terrain. More specifcally, the focus was on how the laws applied to the content-moderation practices that giant social-media platforms use on their best-known services to flter, alter, or label their users' posts. Or more specifcally still, the focus was on how the laws applied to Facebook's News Feed and YouTube's homepage. Refecting the parties' arguments, the Eleventh and Fifth Circuits also mostly confned their analysis in that way. See 34 F. 4th, at 1210, 1213 (considering “platforms like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and TikTok” and content moderation in “viewers' feeds”); 49 F. 4th, at 445, 460, 478, 492 (considering platforms “such as Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube” and referencing users' feeds); see also id., at 501 (Southwick, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (analyzing a curated feed). On their way to opposing conclusions, they concentrated on the same issue: whether a state law can regulate the content-moderation practices used in Facebook's News Feed (or near equivalents). They did not address the full range of activities the laws cover, and measure the constitutional against the unconstitutional applications. In short, they treated these cases more like as- applied claims than like facial ones.
The frst step in the proper facial analysis is to assess the state laws' scope. What activities, by what actors, do the laws prohibit or otherwise regulate? The laws of course differ one from the other. But both, at least on their face, appear to apply beyond Facebook's News Feed and its ilk.
Members of this Court asked some of the relevant questions at oral argument. Starting with Facebook and the other giants: To what extent, if at all, do the laws affect their other services, like direct messaging or events management? See Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 22–555, pp. 62–63; Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 22–277, pp. 24–25; App. in No. 22–277, pp. 129, 159. And beyond those social-media entities, what do the laws have to say, if anything, about how an email provider like Gmail flters incoming messages, how an online marketplace like Etsy displays customer reviews, how a payment service like Venmo manages friends' fnancial exchanges, or how a ride- sharing service like Uber runs? See Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 22–277, at 74–79, 95–98; see also id., at 153 (Solicitor General) (“I have some sympathy [for the Court] here. In preparation for this argument, I've been working with my team to say, does this even cover direct messaging? Does this even cover Gmail?”). Those are examples only. The on- line world is variegated and complex, encompassing an ever- growing number of apps, services, functionalities, and methods for communication and connection. Each might (or might not) have to change because of the provisions, as to either content moderation or individualized explanation, in Florida's or Texas's law. Before a court can do anything else with these facial challenges, it must address that set of issues—in short, must “determine what [the law] covers.” Hansen, 599 U. S., at 770.
The next order of business is to decide which of the laws' applications violate the First Amendment, and to measure them against the rest. For the content-moderation provisions, that means asking, as to every covered platform or function, whether there is an intrusion on protected editorial discretion.
See infra, at 727–733.
And for the individualized-explanation provisions, it means asking, again as to each thing covered, whether the required disclosures unduly burden expression. See Zauderer, 471 U. S., at 651. Even on a preliminary record, it is not hard to see how the answers might differ as between regulation of Facebook's News Feed (considered in the courts below) and, say, its direct messaging service (not so considered). Curating a feed and transmitting direct messages, one might think, involve Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC different levels of editorial choice, so that the one creates an expressive product and the other does not. If so, regulation of those diverse activities could well fall on different sides of the constitutional line. To decide the facial challenges here, the courts below must explore the laws' full range of applications—the constitutionally impermissible and permissible both—and compare the two sets. Maybe the parties treated the content-moderation choices refected in Facebook's News Feed and YouTube's homepage as the laws' heartland applications because they are the principal things regulated, and should have just that weight in the facial analysis. Or maybe not: Maybe the parties' focus had all to do with litigation strategy, and there is a sphere of other applications—and constitutional ones—that would prevent the laws' facial invalidation.
The problem for this Court is that it cannot undertake the needed inquiries. “[W]e are a court of review, not of frst view.” Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U. S. 709, 718, n. 7 (2005). Neither the Eleventh Circuit nor the Fifth Circuit performed the facial analysis in the way just described. And even were we to ignore the value of other courts going frst, we could not proceed very far. The parties have not briefed the critical issues here, and the record is underdeveloped. So we vacate the decisions below and remand these cases. That will enable the lower courts to consider the scope of the laws' applications, and weigh the unconstitutional as against the constitutional ones.
III
But it is necessary to say more about how the First Amendment relates to the laws' content-moderation provisions, to ensure that the facial analysis proceeds on the right path in the courts below. That need is especially stark for the Fifth Circuit. Recall that it held that the content choices the major platforms make for their main feeds are “not speech” at all, so States may regulate them free of the Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication First Amendment's restraints. 49 F. 4th, at 494; see supra, at 722. And even if those activities were expressive, the court held, Texas's interest in better balancing the marketplace of ideas would satisfy First Amendment scrutiny. See 49 F. 4th, at 482. If we said nothing about those views, the court presumably would repeat them when it next considers NetChoice's challenge. It would thus fnd that signifcant applications of the Texas law—and so signifcant inputs into the appropriate facial analysis—raise no First Amendment diffculties. But that conclusion would rest on a serious misunderstanding of First Amendment precedent and principle. The Fifth Circuit was wrong in concluding that Texas's restrictions on the platforms' selection, ordering, and labeling of third-party posts do not interfere with expression. And the court was wrong to treat as valid Texas's interest in changing the content of the platforms' feeds. Explaining why that is so will prevent the Fifth Circuit from repeating its errors as to Facebook's and YouTube's main feeds. (And our analysis of Texas's law may also aid the Eleventh Circuit, which saw the First Amendment issues much as we do, when next considering NetChoice's facial challenge.) But a caveat: Nothing said here addresses any of the laws' other applications, which may or may not share the First Amendment problems described below.3
A
Despite the relative novelty of the technology before us, the main problem in this case—and the inquiry it calls for— 3Although the discussion below focuses on Texas's content-moderation provisions, it also bears on how the lower courts should address the individualized-explanation provisions in the upcoming facial inquiry. As noted, requirements of that kind violate the First Amendment if they unduly burden expressive activity. See Zauderer v. Offce of Disciplinary Counsel of Supreme Court of Ohio, 471 U. S. 626, 651 (1985); supra, at 725. So our explanation of why Facebook and YouTube are engaged in expression when they make content-moderation choices in their main feeds should inform the courts' further consideration of that issue. MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC is not new. At bottom, Texas's law requires the platforms to carry and promote user speech that they would rather discard or downplay. The platforms object that the law thus forces them to alter the content of their expression—a particular edited compilation of third-party speech. See Brief for NetChoice in No. 22–555, pp. 18–34. That controversy sounds a familiar note. We have repeatedly faced the question whether ordering a party to provide a forum for someone else's views implicates the First Amendment. And we have repeatedly held that it does so if, though only if, the regulated party is engaged in its own expressive activity, which the mandated access would alter or disrupt. So too we have held, when applying that principle, that expressive activity includes presenting a curated compilation of speech originally created by others. A review of the relevant precedents will help resolve the question here.
The seminal case is Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tor nillo, 418 U. S. 241 (1974). There, a Florida law required a newspaper to give a political candidate a right to reply when it published “criticism and attacks on his record.” Id., at 243. The Court held the law to violate the First Amendment because it interfered with the newspaper's “exercise of editorial control and judgment.” Id., at 258. Forcing the paper to print what “it would not otherwise print,” the Court explained, “intru[ded] into the function of editors.” Id., at 256, 258. For that function was, frst and foremost, to make decisions about the “content of the paper” and “[t]he choice of material to go into” it. Id., at 258. In protecting that right of editorial control, the Court recognized a possible downside. It noted the access advocates' view (similar to the States' view here) that “modern media empires” had gained ever greater capacity to “shape” and even “manipulate popular opinion.” Id., at 249–250. And the Court expressed some sympathy with that diagnosis. See id., at 254. But the cure proposed, it concluded, collided with the First Amendment's antipathy to state manipulation of the speech Page Proof Pending Publication market. Florida, the Court explained, could not substitute “governmental regulation” for the “crucial process” of editorial choice. Id., at 258.
Next up was Pacifc Gas & Elec. Co. v. Public Util.
Comm'n of Cal., 475 U. S. 1 (1986) (PG&E), which the Court thought to follow naturally from Tornillo. See 475 U. S., at 9–12 (plurality opinion); id., at 21 (Burger, C. J., concurring). A private utility in California regularly put a newsletter in its billing envelopes expressing its views of energy policy. The State directed it to include as well material from a consumer-advocacy group giving a different perspective. The utility objected, and the Court held again that the interest in “offer[ing] the public a greater variety of views” could not justify the regulation. Id., at 12. California was compelling the utility (as Florida had compelled a newspaper) “to carry speech with which it disagreed” and thus to “alter its own message.” Id., at 11, n. 7, 16.
In Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 512 U. S. 622 (1994) (Turner I), the Court further underscored the constitutional protection given to editorial choice. At issue were federal “must-carry” rules, requiring cable operators to allocate some of their channels to local broadcast stations. The Court had no doubt that the First Amendment was implicated, because the operators were engaging in expressive activity. They were, the Court explained, “exercising editorial discretion over which stations or programs to include in [their] repertoire.” Id., at 636. And the rules “interfere[d]” with that discretion by forcing the operators to carry stations they would not otherwise have chosen. Id., at 643– 644. In a later decision, the Court ruled that the regulation survived First Amendment review because it was necessary to prevent the demise of local broadcasting. See Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 520 U. S. 180, 185, 189– 190 (1997) (Turner II); see infra, at 742, n. 10. But for purposes of today's cases, the takeaway of Turner is this holding: A private party's collection of third-party content into a Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC single speech product (the operators' “repertoire” of programming) is itself expressive, and intrusion into that activity must be specially justifed under the First Amendment. The capstone of those precedents came in Hurley v. Irish- American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc., 515 U. S. 557 (1995), when the Court considered (of all things) a parade. The question was whether Massachusetts could require the organizers of a St. Patrick's Day parade to admit as a participant a gay and lesbian group seeking to convey a message of “pride.” Id., at 561. The Court held unanimously that the First Amendment precluded that compulsion. The “selection of contingents to make a parade,” it explained, is entitled to First Amendment protection, no less than a newspaper's “presentation of an edited compilation of [other persons'] speech.” Id., at 570 (citing Tornillo, 418 U. S., at 258). And that meant the State could not tell the parade organizers whom to include. Because “every participating unit affects the message,” said the Court, ordering the group's admittance would “alter the expressive content of the[ ] parade.” Hurley, 515 U. S., at 572–573. The parade's organizers had “decided to exclude a message [they] did not like from the communication [they] chose to make,” and that was their decision alone. Id., at 574.
On two other occasions, the Court distinguished Tornillo and its progeny for the fip-side reason—because in those cases the compelled access did not affect the complaining party's own expression. First, in PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins, 447 U. S. 74 (1980), the Court rejected a shopping mall's First Amendment challenge to a California law requiring it to allow members of the public to distribute handbills on its property. The mall owner did not claim that he (or the mall) was engaged in any expressive activity. Indeed, as the PG&E Court later noted, he “did not even allege that he objected to the content of the pamphlets” passed out at the mall. 475 U. S., at 12. Similarly, in Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc., 547 U. S. 47 (2006) (FAIR), the Court reiterated that a First Amendment claim will not succeed when the entity objecting to hosting third-party speech is not itself engaged in expression. The statute at issue required law schools to allow the military to participate in on-campus recruiting. The Court held that the schools had no First Amendment right to exclude the military based on its hiring policies, because the schools “are not speaking when they host interviews.” Id., at 64. Or stated again, with reference to the just-described precedents: Because a “law school's recruiting services lack the expressive quality of a parade, a newsletter, or the editorial page of a newspaper,” the required “accommodation of a military recruiter[ ]” did not “interfere with any message of the school.” Ibid. That is a slew of individual cases, so consider three general points to wrap up. Not coincidentally, they will fgure in the upcoming discussion of the First Amendment problems the statutes at issue here likely present as to Facebook's News Feed and similar products.
First, the First Amendment offers protection when an entity engaging in expressive activity, including compiling and curating others' speech, is directed to accommodate messages it would prefer to exclude. “[T]he editorial function itself is an aspect of speech.” Denver Area Ed. Telecommu nications Consortium, Inc. v. FCC, 518 U. S. 727, 737 (1996) (plurality opinion). Or said just a bit differently: An entity “exercis[ing] editorial discretion in the selection and presentation” of content is “engage[d] in speech activity.” Arkan sas Ed. Television Comm'n v. Forbes, 523 U. S. 666, 674 (1998). And that is as true when the content comes from third parties as when it does not. (Again, think of a newspaper opinion page or, if you prefer, a parade.) Deciding on the third-party speech that will be included in or excluded from a compilation—and then organizing and presenting the included items—is expressive activity of its own. And that activity results in a distinctive expressive product. When Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC the government interferes with such editorial choices—say, by ordering the excluded to be included—it alters the content of the compilation. (It creates a different opinion page or parade, bearing a different message.) And in so doing— in overriding a private party's expressive choices—the government confronts the First Amendment.4 Second, none of that changes just because a compiler includes most items and excludes just a few. That was the situation in Hurley. The St. Patrick's Day parade at issue there was “eclectic”: It included a “wide variety of patriotic, commercial, political, moral, artistic, religious, athletic, public service, trade union, and eleemosynary themes, as well as conficting messages.” 515 U. S., at 562. Or otherwise said, the organizers were “rather lenient in admitting participants.” Id., at 569. No matter. A “narrow, succinctly articulable message is not a condition of constitutional protection.” Ibid. It “is enough” for a compiler to exclude the handful of messages it most “disfavor[s].” Id., at 574. Suppose, for example, that the newspaper in Tornillo had granted a right of reply to all but one candidate. It would have made no difference; the Florida statute still could not have altered the paper's policy. Indeed, that kind of focused editorial choice packs a peculiarly powerful expressive punch.
Third, the government cannot get its way just by asserting an interest in improving, or better balancing, the marketplace of ideas. Of course, it is critically important to have a well-functioning sphere of expression, in which citizens have access to information from many sources. That is the whole project of the First Amendment. And the government can 4Of course, an entity engaged in expressive activity when performing one function may not be when carrying out another. That is one lesson of FAIR. The Court ruled as it did because the law schools' recruiting services were not engaged in expression. See 547 U. S. 47, 64 (2006). The case could not have been resolved on that ground if the regulation had affected what happened in law school classes instead. Page Proof Pending Publication take varied measures, like enforcing competition laws, to protect that access. Cf., e. g., Turner I, 512 U. S., at 647 (protecting local broadcasting); Hurley, 515 U. S., at 577 (discussing Turner I). But in case after case, the Court has barred the government from forcing a private speaker to present views it wished to spurn in order to rejigger the expressive realm. The regulations in Tornillo, PG&E, and Hurley all were thought to promote greater diversity of expression. See supra, at 728–730. They also were thought to counteract advantages some private parties possessed in controlling “enviable vehicle[s]” for speech. Hurley, 515 U. S., at 577. Indeed, the Tornillo Court devoted six pages of its opinion to recounting a critique of the then-current media environment—in particular, the disproportionate “infuen[ce]” of a few speakers—similar to one heard today (except about different entities). 418 U. S., at 249; see id., at 248–254; supra, at 728–729. It made no difference. However imperfect the private marketplace of ideas, here was a worse proposal—the government itself deciding when speech was imbalanced, and then coercing speakers to provide more of some views or less of others.
B
“[W]hatever the challenges of applying the Constitution to ever-advancing technology, the basic principles” of the First Amendment “do not vary.” Brown v. Entertainment Mer chants Assn., 564 U. S. 786, 790 (2011). New communications media differ from old ones in a host of ways: No one thinks Facebook's News Feed much resembles an insert put in a billing envelope. And similarly, today's social media pose dangers not seen earlier: No one ever feared the effects of newspaper opinion pages on adolescents' mental health. But analogies to old media, even if imperfect, can be useful. And better still as guides to decision are settled principles about freedom of expression, including the ones just described. Those principles have served the Nation well over Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC many years, even as one communications method has given way to another. And they have much to say about the laws at issue here. These cases, to be sure, are at an early stage; the record is incomplete even as to the major social-media platforms' main feeds, much less the other applications that must now be considered. See supra, at 726. But in reviewing the District Court's preliminary injunction, the Fifth Circuit got its likelihood-of-success fnding wrong. Texas is not likely to succeed in enforcing its law against the platforms' application of their content-moderation policies to the feeds that were the focus of the proceedings below. And that is because of the core teaching elaborated in the above- summarized decisions: The government may not, in supposed pursuit of better expressive balance, alter a private speak- er's own editorial choices about the mix of speech it wants to convey.
Most readers are likely familiar with Facebook's News Feed or YouTube's homepage; assuming so, feel free to skip this paragraph (and maybe a couple more). For the uninitiated, though, each of those feeds presents a user with a continually updating stream of other users' posts. For Facebook's News Feed, any user may upload a message, whether verbal or visual, with content running the gamut from “vacation pictures from friends” to “articles from local or national news outlets.” App. in No. 22–555, at 139a. And whenever a user signs on, Facebook delivers a personalized collection of those stories. Similarly for YouTube. Its users upload all manner of videos. And any person opening the website or mobile app receives an individualized list of video recommendations.
The key to the scheme is prioritization of content, achieved through the use of algorithms. Of the billions of posts or videos (plus advertisements) that could wind up on a user's customized feed or recommendations list, only the tiniest fraction do. The selection and ranking is most often based on a user's expressed interests and past activities. But it may also be based on more general features of the communication or its creator. Facebook's Community Standards and YouTube's Community Guidelines detail the messages and videos that the platforms disfavor. The platforms write algorithms to implement those standards—for example, to prefer content deemed particularly trustworthy or to suppress content viewed as deceptive (like videos promoting “conspiracy theor[ies]”). Id., at 113a.
Beyond rankings lie labels. The platforms may attach “warning[s], disclaimers, or general commentary”—for example, informing users that certain content has “not been verifed by offcial sources.” Id., at 75a. Likewise, they may use “information panels” to give users “context on content relating to topics and news prone to misinformation, as well as context about who submitted the content.” Id., at 114a. So, for example, YouTube identifes content submitted by state-supported media channels, including those funded by the Russian Government. See id., at 76a.
But sometimes, the platforms decide, providing more information is not enough; instead, removing a post is the right course. The platforms' content-moderation policies also say when that is so. Facebook's Standards, for example, proscribe posts—with exceptions for “newsworth[iness]” and other “public interest value”—in categories and subcategories including: Violence and Criminal Behavior (e. g., violence and incitement, coordinating harm and publicizing crime, fraud and deception); Safety (e. g., suicide and self-injury, sexual exploitation, bullying and harassment); Objectionable Content (e. g., hate speech, violent and graphic content); Integrity and Authenticity (e. g., false news, manipulated media). Id., at 412a–415a, 441a–442a. YouTube's Guidelines similarly target videos falling within categories like: hate speech, violent or graphic content, child safety, and misinformation (including about elections and vaccines). See Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC id., at 430a–432a. The platforms thus unabashedly control the content that will appear to users, exercising authority to remove, label or demote messages they disfavor.5 Except that Texas's law limits their power to do so. As noted earlier, the law's central provision prohibits the large social-media platforms (and maybe other entities6) from “censor[ing]” a “user's expression” based on its “viewpoint.” § 143A.002(a)(2); see supra, at 721. The law defnes “expression” broadly, thus including pretty much anything that might be posted. See § 143A.001(2). And it defnes “censor” to mean “block, ban, remove, deplatform, demonetize, de-boost, restrict, deny equal access or visibility to, or otherwise discriminate against expression.”
§ 143A.001(1).7 That is a long list of verbs, but it comes down to this: The platforms cannot do any of the things they typically do (on their main feeds) to posts they disapprove—cannot demote, label, or remove them—whenever the action is based on the 5We therefore do not deal here with feeds whose algorithms respond solely to how users act online—giving them the content they appear to want, without any regard to independent content standards. See post, at 746 (Barrett, J., concurring). Like them or loathe them, the Community Standards and Community Guidelines make a wealth of user-agnostic judgments about what kinds of speech, including what viewpoints, are not worthy of promotion. And those judgments show up in Facebook's and YouTube's main feeds.
6The scope of the Texas law, a matter crucial to the facial inquiry, is unsettled, as previously discussed. See supra, at 724–725. The Texas solicitor general at oral argument stated that he understood the law to cover Facebook and YouTube, but “d[id]n't know” whether it also covered other platforms and applications. Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 22–555, pp. 61–62. 7In addition to barring “censor[ship]” of “expression,” the law bars “censor[ship]” of people. More specifcally, it prohibits taking the designated “censor[ial]” actions against any “user” based on his “viewpoint,” regardless of whether that “viewpoint is expressed on a social media platform.” §§ 143A.002(a)(1), (b); see supra, at 721. Because the Fifth Circuit did not focus on that provision, instead confning its analysis to the law's ban on “censor[ing]” a “user's expression” on the platform, we do the same. Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication post's viewpoint.8 And what does that “based on viewpoint” requirement entail? Doubtless some of the platforms' content-moderation practices are based on characteristics of speech other than viewpoint (e. g., on subject matter). But if Texas's law is enforced, the platforms could not—as they in fact do now—disfavor posts because they: • support Nazi ideology; • advocate for terrorism; • espouse racism, Islamophobia, or anti-Semitism; • glorify rape or other gender-based violence; • encourage teenage suicide and self-injury; • discourage the use of vaccines; • advise phony treatments for diseases; • advance false claims of election fraud.
The list could continue for a while.9 The point of it is not that the speech environment created by Texas's law is worse than the ones to which the major platforms aspire on their main feeds. The point is just that Texas's law profoundly alters the platforms' choices about the views they will, and will not, convey.
8The Texas solicitor general explained at oral argument that the Texas law allows the platforms to remove “categories” of speech, so long as they are not based on viewpoint. See Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 22–555, at 69–70; § 120.052 (Acceptable Use Policy). The example he gave was speech about Al-Qaeda. Under the law, a platform could remove all posts about Al-Qaeda, regardless of viewpoint. But it could not stop the “pro-Al- Qaeda” speech alone; it would have to stop the “anti-Al-Qaeda” speech too. Tr. of Oral Arg. in No. 22–555, at 70. So again, the law, as described by the solicitor general, prevents the platforms from disfavoring posts because they express one view of a subject.
9Details on both the enumerated examples and similar ones are found in Facebook's Community Standards and YouTube's Community Guidelines. See https://transparency.meta.com/policies/community-standards; https:// support.google.com/youtube/answer/9288567.
MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC And we have time and again held that type of regulation to interfere with protected speech. Like the editors, cable operators, and parade organizers this Court has previously considered, the major social-media platforms are in the business, when curating their feeds, of combining “multifarious voices” to create a distinctive expressive offering. Hurley, 515 U. S., at 569. The individual messages may originate with third parties, but the larger offering is the platform's. It is the product of a wealth of choices about whether—and, if so, how—to convey posts having a certain content or viewpoint. Those choices rest on a set of beliefs about which messages are appropriate and which are not (or which are more appropriate and which less so). And in the aggregate they give the feed a particular expressive quality. Consider again an opinion page editor, as in Tornillo, who wants to publish a variety of views, but thinks some things off-limits (or, to change the facts, worth only a couple of column inches). “The choice of material,” the “decisions made [as to] content,” the “treatment of public issues”—“whether fair or unfair”—all these “constitute the exercise of editorial control and judgment.” Tornillo, 418 U. S., at 258. For a paper, and for a platform too. And the Texas law (like Florida's earlier right-of-reply statute) targets those expressive choices—in particular, by forcing the major platforms to present and promote content on their feeds that they regard as objectionable.
That those platforms happily convey the lion's share of posts submitted to them makes no signifcant First Amendment difference. Contra, 49 F. 4th, at 459–461 (arguing otherwise). To begin with, Facebook and YouTube exclude (not to mention, label or demote) lots of content from their News Feed and homepage. The Community Standards and Community Guidelines set out in copious detail the varied kinds of speech the platforms want no truck with. And both platforms appear to put those manuals to work. In a single quarter of 2021, Facebook removed from its News Feed more Page Proof Pending Publication than 25 million pieces of “hate speech content” and almost 9 million pieces of “bullying and harassment content.” App. in No. 22–555, at 80a. Similarly, YouTube deleted in one quarter more than 6 million videos violating its Guidelines. See id., at 116a. And among those are the removals the Texas law targets. What is more, this Court has already rightly declined to focus on the ratio of rejected to accepted content. Recall that in Hurley, the parade organizers welcomed pretty much everyone, excluding only those who expressed a message of gay pride. See supra, at 732. The Court held that the organizers' “lenient” admissions policy— and their resulting failure to express a “particularized message”—did “not forfeit” their right to reject the few messages they found harmful or offensive. 515 U. S., at 569, 574. So too here, though the excluded viewpoints differ. That Facebook and YouTube convey a mass of messages does not license Texas to prohibit them from deleting posts with, say, “hate speech” based on “sexual orientation.” App. in No. 22–555, at 126a, 155a; see id., at 431a. It is as much an editorial choice to convey all speech except in select categories as to convey only speech within them.
Similarly, the major social-media platforms do not lose their First Amendment protection just because no one will wrongly attribute to them the views in an individual post. Contra, 49 F. 4th, at 462 (arguing otherwise). For starters, users may well attribute to the platforms the messages that the posts convey in toto. Those messages—communicated by the feeds as a whole—derive largely from the platforms' editorial decisions about which posts to remove, label, or demote. And because that is so, the platforms may indeed “own” the overall speech environment. In any event, this Court has never hinged a compiler's First Amendment protection on the risk of misattribution. The Court did not think in Turner—and could not have thought in Tornillo or PG&E—that anyone would view the entity conveying the third-party speech at issue as endorsing its content. See Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC Turner I, 512 U. S., at 655 (“[T]here appears little risk” of such misattribution). Yet all those entities, the Court held, were entitled to First Amendment protection for refusing to carry the speech. See supra, at 728–730. To be sure, the Court noted in PruneYard and FAIR, when denying such protection, that there was little prospect of misattribution. See 447 U. S., at 87; 547 U. S., at 65. But the key fact in those cases, as noted above, was that the host of the third- party speech was not itself engaged in expression. See supra, at 730–731. The current record suggests the opposite as to Facebook's News Feed and YouTube's homepage. When the platforms use their Standards and Guidelines to decide which third-party content those feeds will display, or how the display will be ordered and organized, they are making expressive choices. And because that is true, they receive First Amendment protection.
C
And once that much is decided, the interest Texas relies on cannot sustain its law. In the usual First Amendment case, we must decide whether to apply strict or intermediate scrutiny. But here we need not. Even assuming that the less stringent form of First Amendment review applies, Texas's law does not pass. Under that standard, a law must further a “substantial governmental interest” that is “unrelated to the suppression of free expression.” United States v. O'Brien, 391 U. S. 367, 377 (1968). Many possible interests relating to social media can meet that test; nothing said here puts regulation of NetChoice's members off-limits as to a whole array of subjects. But the interest Texas has asserted cannot carry the day: It is very much related to the suppression of free expression, and it is not valid, let alone substantial.
Texas has never been shy, and always been consistent, about its interest: The objective is to correct the mix of speech that the major social-media platforms present. In Page Proof Pending Publication this Court, Texas described its law as “respond[ing]” to the platforms' practice of “favoring certain viewpoints.” Brief for Texas 7; see id., at 27 (explaining that the platforms' “discrimination” among messages “led to [the law's] enactment”). The large social-media platforms throw out (or encumber) certain messages; Texas wants them kept in (and free from encumbrances), because it thinks that would create a better speech balance. The current amalgam, the State explained in earlier briefng, was “skewed” to one side. 573 F. Supp. 3d, at 1116. And that assessment mirrored the stated views of those who enacted the law, save that the latter had a bit more color. The law's main sponsor explained that the “West Coast oligarchs” who ran social-media companies were “silenc[ing] conservative viewpoints and ideas.” Ibid. The Governor, in signing the legislation, echoed the point: The companies were fomenting a “dangerous movement” to “silence” conservatives. Id., at 1108; see id., at 1099 (“[S]ilencing conservative views is un-American, it's un-Texan and it's about to be illegal in Texas”).
But a State may not interfere with private actors' speech to advance its own vision of ideological balance. States (and their citizens) are of course right to want an expressive realm in which the public has access to a wide range of views. That is, indeed, a fundamental aim of the First Amendment. But the way the First Amendment achieves that goal is by preventing the government from “tilt[ing] public debate in a preferred direction.” Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc., 564 U. S. 552, 578–579 (2011). It is not by licensing the government to stop private actors from speaking as they wish and preferring some views over others. And that is so even when those actors possess “enviable vehicle[s]” for expression. Hurley, 515 U. S., at 577. In a better world, there would be fewer inequities in speech opportunities; and the government can take many steps to bring that world closer. But it cannot prohibit speech to improve or better balance the speech market. On the spectrum of dangers to free expression, Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC there are few greater than allowing the government to change the speech of private actors in order to achieve its own conception of speech nirvana. That is why we have said in so many contexts that the government may not “restrict the speech of some elements of our society in order to enhance the relative voice of others.” Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1, 48–49 (1976) (per curiam). That unadorned interest is not “unrelated to the suppression of free expression,” and the government may not pursue it consistent with the First Amendment.
The Court's decisions about editorial control, as discussed earlier, make that point repeatedly. See supra, at 732–733. Again, the question those cases had in common was whether the government could force a private speaker, including a compiler and curator of third-party speech, to convey views it disapproved. And in most of those cases, the government defended its regulation as yielding greater balance in the marketplace of ideas.
But the Court—in Tornillo, in PG&E, and again in Hurley—held that such an interest could not support the government's effort to alter the speaker's own expression. “Our cases establish,” the PG&E Court wrote, “that the State cannot advance some points of view by burdening the expression of others.” 475 U. S., at 20. So the newspaper, the public utility, the parade organizer— whether acting “fair[ly] or unfair[ly]”—could exclude the unwanted message, free from government interference. Tor nillo, 418 U. S., at 258; see United States Telecom Assn. v. FCC, 855 F. 3d 381, 432 (CADC 2017) (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc) (“[E]xcept in rare circumstances, the First Amendment does not allow the Government to regulate the content choices of private editors just so that the Government may enhance certain voices and alter the content available to the citizenry”).10 10Texas claims Turner as a counter-example, but that decision offers no help to speak of. Turner did indeed hold that the FCC's must-carry provisions, requiring cable operators to give some of their channel space Page Proof Pending Publication The case here is no different. The interest Texas asserts is in changing the balance of speech on the major platforms' feeds, so that messages now excluded will be included. To describe that interest, the State borrows language from this Court's First Amendment cases, maintaining that it is preventing “viewpoint discrimination.” Brief for Texas 19; see supra, at 740–741. But the Court uses that language to say what governments cannot do: They cannot prohibit private actors from expressing certain views. When Texas uses that language, it is to say what private actors cannot do: They cannot decide for themselves what views to convey. The innocent-sounding phrase does not redeem the prohibited goal. The reason Texas is regulating the content- moderation policies that the major platforms use for their feeds is to change the speech that will be displayed there. Texas does not like the way those platforms are selecting and moderating content, and wants them to create a different expressive product, communicating different values and priorities. But under the First Amendment, that is a preference Texas may not impose.
IV
These are facial challenges, and that matters. To succeed on its First Amendment claim, NetChoice must show that to local broadcast stations, passed First Amendment muster. See supra, at 729. But the interest there advanced was not to balance expressive content; rather, the interest was to save the local-broadcast industry, so that it could continue to serve households without cable. That interest, the Court explained, was “unrelated to the content of expression” disseminated by either cable or broadcast speakers. Turner I, 512 U. S. 622, 647 (1994). And later, the Hurley Court again noted the difference. It understood the Government interest in Turner as one relating to competition policy: The FCC needed to limit the cable operators' “monopolistic,” gatekeeping position “in order to allow for the survival of broadcasters.” 515 U. S., at 577. Unlike in regulating the parade—or here in regulating Facebook's News Feed or YouTube's homepage—the Government's interest was “not the alteration of speech.” Ibid. And when that is so, the prospects of permissible regulation are entirely different. Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication MOODY v. NETCHOICE, LLC the law at issue (whether from Texas or from Florida) “prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech relative to its plainly legitimate sweep.” Hansen, 599 U. S., at 770. None of the parties below focused on that issue; nor did the Fifth or Eleventh Circuits. But that choice, unanimous as it has been, cannot now control. Even in the First Amendment context, facial challenges are disfavored, and neither parties nor courts can disregard the requisite inquiry into how a law works in all of its applications. So on remand, each court must evaluate the full scope of the law's coverage. It must then decide which of the law's applications are constitutionally permissible and which are not, and fnally weigh the one against the other. The need for NetChoice to carry its burden on those issues is the price of its decision to challenge the laws as a whole.
But there has been enough litigation already to know that the Fifth Circuit, if it stayed the course, would get wrong at least one signifcant input into the facial analysis. The parties treated Facebook's News Feed and YouTube's homepage as the heartland applications of the Texas law. At least on the current record, the editorial judgments infuencing the content of those feeds are, contrary to the Fifth Circuit's view, protected expressive activity. And Texas may not interfere with those judgments simply because it would prefer a different mix of messages. How that matters for the requisite facial analysis is for the Fifth Circuit to decide. But it should conduct that analysis in keeping with two First Amendment precepts. First, presenting a curated and “edited compilation of [third party] speech” is itself protected speech. Hurley, 515 U. S., at 570. And second, a State “cannot advance some points of view by burdening the expression of others.” PG&E, 475 U. S., at 20. To give government that power is to enable it to control the expression of ideas, promoting those it favors and suppressing those it does not. And that is what the First Amendment protects all of us from.
We accordingly vacate the judgments of the Courts of Appeals for the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits and remand the cases for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. It is so ordered.