STATEMENT OF INTEREST OF AMICUS CURIAE
Amicus
Curiae is a citizen of New York and a direct beneficiary of the
"hospitable climate" for free expression fostered by the New York
Constitution. Amicus’s perspective is informed by a unique intersection
of labor, science, and economics: from delivering the New York Times to earning an Economics Certificate from the State University of New York (1978). Amicus has witnessed the global reach of the New York "information empire" firsthand, having contributed to the IBM ecosystem both at 590 Madison Avenue and its scientific outposts in Boulder, Colorado.
Amicus submits this brief to ensure that the constitutional soil which
allowed commerce, art, and science to flourish in this State is
nurtured, not eroded by state-mandated disclosure.
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
I. The New York Constitution Provides an Affirmative, Expansive Right to Speech that Exceeds the Federal Floor.
While the First Amendment serves as a restrictive "negative" right, N.Y. Const. Art. 1, § 8 is an affirmative grant of liberty: "Every citizen may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects." This Court must recognize that New York’s protection is "more expansive" than the federal First Amendment (Immuno AG. v. Moor-Jankowski, 1991). As Justice Brennan famously argued, state constitutions are a "font of individual liberties" that should not be mechanically tethered to federal minimums (Brennan, 90 Harv. L. Rev. 489).
While the First Amendment serves as a restrictive "negative" right, N.Y. Const. Art. 1, § 8 is an affirmative grant of liberty: "Every citizen may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects." This Court must recognize that New York’s protection is "more expansive" than the federal First Amendment (Immuno AG. v. Moor-Jankowski, 1991). As Justice Brennan famously argued, state constitutions are a "font of individual liberties" that should not be mechanically tethered to federal minimums (Brennan, 90 Harv. L. Rev. 489).
II. The "Hospitable Climate" of New York Law is the Foundation of its Economic and Scientific Empire.
New York did not become the world’s media and financial capital by accident. The State’s status as a hub for Random House, Simon & Schuster, and IBM was made possible by a predictable legal environment that rejects prior restraint and compelled speech (Brandreth v. Lance, 1839). This "hospitable climate" for the exchange of ideas was the catalyst for an empire of commerce and science that exported stability from Wall Street to the Rocky Mountains.
New York did not become the world’s media and financial capital by accident. The State’s status as a hub for Random House, Simon & Schuster, and IBM was made possible by a predictable legal environment that rejects prior restraint and compelled speech (Brandreth v. Lance, 1839). This "hospitable climate" for the exchange of ideas was the catalyst for an empire of commerce and science that exported stability from Wall Street to the Rocky Mountains.
III. The Right to Anonymity is a Shield Against Compelled Self-Identification.
The Supreme Court has held that an author’s decision to remain anonymous is a protected aspect of free speech (McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm., 1995). In New York, this right is deeply rooted in the Zenger Trial (1735) and the defense of the press in People v. Croswell (1804). Any state mandate requiring the disclosure of "sentiment" or "moderation" policies threatens the digital anonymity that modern dissenters require—a right New York protected alone for 150 years before the federal "incorporation" in Gitlow v. New York (1925).
The Supreme Court has held that an author’s decision to remain anonymous is a protected aspect of free speech (McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm., 1995). In New York, this right is deeply rooted in the Zenger Trial (1735) and the defense of the press in People v. Croswell (1804). Any state mandate requiring the disclosure of "sentiment" or "moderation" policies threatens the digital anonymity that modern dissenters require—a right New York protected alone for 150 years before the federal "incorporation" in Gitlow v. New York (1925).
ARGUMENT
A. The Legacy of the Ticker: Data as Speech
The "Empire" of New York was built on the democratization of information. The stock ticker and the IBM/Quotron terminals on Wall Street were the pinnacle of free speech—real-time truth that drove global markets. Amicus submits that the internet is merely the modern successor to the ticker. Just as the State protected the "tape" to ensure economic dominance, it must now protect the digital square from regulatory overreach that compels the disclosure of user sentiment.
The "Empire" of New York was built on the democratization of information. The stock ticker and the IBM/Quotron terminals on Wall Street were the pinnacle of free speech—real-time truth that drove global markets. Amicus submits that the internet is merely the modern successor to the ticker. Just as the State protected the "tape" to ensure economic dominance, it must now protect the digital square from regulatory overreach that compels the disclosure of user sentiment.
B. The Institutional Duty to Nurture
In NYT Co. v. Sullivan (1964) and the Pentagon Papers Case (1971), New York’s media institutions acted as a national watchdog. This role was only possible because New York law nurtured an environment where publishers were "responsible for the abuse of that right" after publication, rather than being micro-managed beforehand. To impose new transparency mandates on platforms today is to abandon the "Responsibility Model" that made the New York Times a global standard.
In NYT Co. v. Sullivan (1964) and the Pentagon Papers Case (1971), New York’s media institutions acted as a national watchdog. This role was only possible because New York law nurtured an environment where publishers were "responsible for the abuse of that right" after publication, rather than being micro-managed beforehand. To impose new transparency mandates on platforms today is to abandon the "Responsibility Model" that made the New York Times a global standard.
CONCLUSION
From
the trial of John Peter Zenger to the scientific dominance of 590
Madison Avenue, New York’s greatness has been inseparable from its
refusal to allow the State to dictate the terms of public discourse. The
Court should uphold the independent authority of the New York
Constitution to protect anonymous speech and ensure that the State’s
hospitable climate remains a sanctuary for the next era of innovation.
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