X Corp. v. Center for Countering Digital Hate, INC. Court Filing, retrieved on March 25, 2024 is part of HackerNoonâs Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This part is 7 of 19.
1. âIn Furtherance ofâ
CCDHâs writing of reports and articles about X Corp.âwriting the complaint references over and over, see, e.g., FAC ¶¶ 1, 3â4, 12, 17â24, 38, 41, 43â52, 54â60, 62, 65â70, 77â78, 84â85, 92, 96, 98âunquestionably constitutes an act âin furtherance ofâ CCDHâs free speech rights. See Hilton, 599 F.3d at 904 (producing a birthday card is conduct in furtherance of free speech rights). CCDH also makes a compelling case that gathering the data used in its publications is also an act in furtherance of its free speech rights. See MTD&S at 8â9. âBecause newsgathering is part and parcel of [reporting the news], newsgathering likewise constitutes protected activity.â Iloh v. Regents of Univ. of Cal.. 94 Cal. App. 5th 947, 956â57 (2023). âReporting the news usually requires the assistance of newsgathering, which therefore can be construed as undertaken in furtherance of the news mediaâs right to free speech.â Lieberman v. KCOP Television, Inc., 110 Cal. App. 4th 156, 166 (2003); see also Taus v. Loftus, 40 Cal. 4th 683, 713 (2007) (âconducting an investigationâ was âunquestionably . . . conduct in furtherance of [the] right of free speechâ). CCDH obtained X Corp. data in order to use that data in its reports and articles. See FAC ¶ 70 (âCCDHâs conduct to obtain that data (which it then distorted) was necessary for CCDH to make its allegations against X Corp. and X regarding hate speech and other types of content on X.â), id. ¶¶ 44â55 (describing the two reports and one article at issue in this case). Accordingly, the acquisition of X Corp. data was newsgathering in furtherance of CCDHâs protected rights.
Moreover, it is irrelevant for the purposes of satisfying CCDHâs burden at the first step if CCDH did its newsgathering improperly. In Navellier v. Sletten, 52 P.3d 703, 712 (Cal. 2002), the plaintiffs noted that the anti-SLAPP statute took aim at lawsuits that chilled the âvalid exerciseâ of free speech rights, and argued that the statute did not apply where the petitioning activity at issue âwas not âvalid.ââ The court disagreed, explaining that âany claimed illegitimacy of the defendantâs act is an issue which the plaintiff must raise and support in the context of the discharge of the plaintiffâs [secondary] burden to provide a prima facie showing of the merits of the plaintiffâs case.â Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Likewise, in Smith v. Payne, No. C 12-01732 DMR, 2012 WL 6712041, at *4 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 26, 2012), the court rejected the plaintiffsâ argument that they needed discovery of ââthe precise nature of pre-publication acts constituting [the defendantâs] conduct toward [p]laintiffsâ to show that his motives in allegedly trespassing on private property and assaulting them âhad nothing to do with furtherance of the exercise of constitutional right of petition or free speech.ââ Judge Ryu explained: âTo the extent that [the plaintiffs] seek such discovery to show that [the defendantâs] actions . . . were not performed in connection with newsgathering, but for some other, sinister motive, such an argument âconfuses the threshold question of whether the SLAPP statute [potentially] applies with the question whether [the plaintiffs have] established a probability of success on the merits.ââ Id. (quoting Birkner v. Lam, 156 Cal. App. 4th 275, 284 (2007)). X Corp.âs argument that âparties to a contract cannot disregard the terms of their agreements, or governing statutory law, simply by invoking the mere pursuit of contemplated, alleged protected speech,â see Oppân at 11, therefore misses the mark. If CCDHâs conduct breached a contract or violated a law, that is an issue for the second step of the anti-SLAPP analysis, where X Corp. bears the burden.
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