Computer & Communication Industry Association
PublishedJuly 3, 2025

CCIA Asks Appeals Court to Uphold Block on Texas Mandate for Monitoring and Filtering Internet Content

Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association and its co-plaintiff NetChoice filed a response brief today in their ongoing First Amendment challenge  to Texas HB18, a social media law known as the SCOPE Act. In August 2024, a Texas district court agreed to block several key parts of HB18 from becoming effective, and  Texas appealed that decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. The Texas AG filed its appellate brief in April 2025, and today CCIA and NetChoice responded to the AG’s arguments.

Today’s brief makes clear that the SCOPE Act attempts to restrict, and in many cases ban, access to protected online speech. Under the longstanding Supreme Court test that was reiterated in its July 1, 2024 Moody v. NetChoice/CCIA opinion, those restrictions violate the First Amendment many times over. 

The following can be attributed to CCIA Senior Vice President, Chief of Staff, and Director of CCIA Litigation Center Stephanie Joyce:

“The SCOPE Act’s requirements to monitor, filter, and block internet content deserve stringent First Amendment scrutiny, which they cannot survive. The district court’s decision to block these requirements was in keeping with federal law and we ask the appeals court to uphold that decision. We look forward to pursuing our legal challenge to a final judgment that this law is unconstitutional.”

News

CCIA to Testify Against Washington Bill That Raises Free Speech and Privacy Concerns

Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association will testify today before the Washington State Senate Business, Trade, and Economic Development Committee in opposition to Senate ...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
    Privacy
News

CCIA Applauds FCC Vote to Expand Broadband Spectrum with More Unlicensed 6 GHz Uses

Washington – The FCC has voted unanimously to expand unlicensed operations in the 6 GHz spectrum to allow a new class of unlicensed, higher-power 6 GHz devices. This means expanded broadband access ...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Telecom
News

CCIA Comments on 2026 Special 301 Report

Washington — The Computer & Communications Industry Association has filed comments in response to the Office of the United States Trade Representative’s (USTR) request for comments on the 2026...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Trade
News

CCIA to Testify Against New Hampshire Tech Bills Raising Free Speech and Privacy Concerns

Washington – The Computer & Communications Industry Association will testify today before the New Hampshire House Committee on Commerce and Consumer Affairs in opposition to two technology bills...
reading-tablet
  • Press Releases
  • Content Moderation