Is a Facebook “like” considered free speech? One Virginia sheriff's deputy who lost his job over one certainly thinks so.

Hampton, Va. Sheriff B.J. Roberts fired six of his employees for supporting his political rival during a 2009 election, including Daniel Ray Carter Jr., who gave his internet thumbs-up to the Facebook page “Jim Adams for Hampton Sheriff.”

Carter claimed that a Facebook like should be protected under the First Amendment right to free speech, but a Virginia district court felt differently. The court said in its May ruling that activity can't be considered free speech if the person doesn't actually say anything.

“Liking a Facebook page is insufficient speech to merit constitutional protection,” the court wrote.

Carter is down, but not out yet. He filed an appeal last week, and is waiting for the sheriff's lawyers to respond. Briefs filed supporting his appeal argue that existing law has a different definition of free speech.

“The judge is wrong in the sense that the Facebook button actually says the word 'like,' so there are actually words being used,” said Aden Fine, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which has filed one such brief. “And there's a thumbs-up symbol, which most people understand means they, literally, like something.”

Facebook has also filed a brief supporting Carter, saying that a like for a political candidate is “the 21st-century equivalent of a front-yard campaign sign.”

Read more at CNN.

 

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Is a Facebook “like” considered free speech? One Virginia sheriff's deputy who lost his job over one certainly thinks so.

Hampton, Va. Sheriff B.J. Roberts fired six of his employees for supporting his political rival during a 2009 election, including Daniel Ray Carter Jr., who gave his internet thumbs-up to the Facebook page “Jim Adams for Hampton Sheriff.”

Carter claimed that a Facebook like should be protected under the First Amendment right to free speech, but a Virginia district court felt differently. The court said in its May ruling that activity can't be considered free speech if the person doesn't actually say anything.

“Liking a Facebook page is insufficient speech to merit constitutional protection,” the court wrote.

Carter is down, but not out yet. He filed an appeal last week, and is waiting for the sheriff's lawyers to respond. Briefs filed supporting his appeal argue that existing law has a different definition of free speech.

“The judge is wrong in the sense that the Facebook button actually says the word 'like,' so there are actually words being used,” said Aden Fine, a senior staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which has filed one such brief. “And there's a thumbs-up symbol, which most people understand means they, literally, like something.”

Facebook has also filed a brief supporting Carter, saying that a like for a political candidate is “the 21st-century equivalent of a front-yard campaign sign.”

Read more at CNN.

 

For more InsideCounsel coverage of social media, see below:

Judges more open to using social media

Illinois passes social media privacy law to safeguard employee passwords

How in-house lawyers are using social media

Twitter GC apologizes for suspending reporter's account

NLRB memo offers social media policy guidance

Social media stats: In-house counsel's new media use by the numbers