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Preston Byrne's avatar

Thanks for your comments. The drafters expect federal action on this issue very shortly.

When that federal action finally arrives it would be better to have a state law cause of action ready to go than on the drawing board. In the meantime, it is certainly no secret to us that the FSIA is a huge hurdle to get over - we did go to law school, after all, and I am litigating a case in D.C. on this exact issue against the UK's Ofcom in which Ofcom raised sovereign immunity as a defense - but it is not an impervious shield, and given the right fact pattern it can be overcome.

FSIA is also not the first and only hurdle a lawsuit against a foreign censor needs to get over. Your first hurdle in filing a lawsuit over foreign censorship is that you need a cause of action, and this bill creates one.

On the damages point, $1 million statutory damages was tailored to the scale of damages awards one can sometimes see in IP infringement cases. (My original proposal was $10 million but it was scaled down to address the exact concern you identified.)

In the foreign censorship cases the GRANITE Act is designed to address, the threatened fines from foreign states that seek to enforce their censorship laws in the U.S. are routinely in the millions - for failing to provide a report on its moderation practices to the UK, 4chan, for example, was threatened with criminal charges and statutory damages not to exceed 10% of its global worldwide turnover or £18 million (approx $24 million), whichever is greater. This mechanism is replicated by the EU Digital Services Act. GRANITE is designed to provide a damages award equal to the amount of the threatened foreign penalty, thus making the foreign penalty economically non-viable to enforce.

On the M2 point, nation-states do not buy bread at U.S. grocery stores. CPI is not the appropriate inflation measure. The intended effect of the "sword" provisions is to deter foreign censorship attempts. If foreign states will simply respect Americans' civil rights and stop sending letters to U.S. companies threatening their staff with jail time for constitutionally protected speech and conduct, there's no reason they should ever have a problem with a GRANITE-type law.

Finally, I'm not a lobbyist. I have been representing every target of foreign censorship laws who needs a defense, pro bono. My day to day work focuses on commercial contracts advice and commercial litigation, not political stuff.

We look forward to seeing what our friends in Congress are cooking up very soon.

Karen Spinner's avatar

I’m not sure this trash bill deserved your careful evisceration…but thank you! 🙏❤️

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