If a platform knowingly profits from fraud at scale, can it still credibly claim to be a “neutral intermediary”? Where should courts draw that line?, Does Meta’s promise to remove deceptive ads transform a moral expectation into a legal duty—and should companies be punished for failing to meet their own standards?, Is the Calise case a necessary correction to Section 230, or a dangerous precedent that could chill online speech and innovation?, Should intent matter more than outcome when assigning liability—especially if a company calculates that fines are cheaper than enforcement?, How should courts balance consumer protection against the risk of forcing platforms into over-moderation and censorship?, To what extent is Meta responsible for scams originating in jurisdictions where legal enforcement against perpetrators is nearly impossible?, Is it ethically defensible to tolerate a “permanent baseline” of harm if it maximizes shareholder value? Why or why not?, Would imposing liability for scam ads actually reduce fraud, or simply push platforms to restrict access, raise prices, or exit certain markets?, If Meta loses this case, should other platforms proactively rewrite their terms of service—or would that merely encourage strategic vagueness?, Should users accept a certain level of fraud as the cost of free platforms, or has that social contract already been broken?.
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