If you are reading this, you have likely just scrolled past a lawyer’s wet dream. Four cases land this week that promise to redefine social media law in Britain. The usual suspects are involved: misinformation, terrorism, child safety, and defamation. The usual result? A little more freedom lost, a little more state control gained.
Let us begin with the first: a libel case from a prominent politician suing a Twitter user for sharing a parody account. In Victorian times, we called this lampooning; now we call it litigation. The irony is that the politician who demands ‘respect for institutions’ is using those same institutions to crush a joke.
Case two: a mother whose son was radicalised online sues the platform for ‘hosting extremist content’. No one denies the tragedy. But the remedy? Algorithmic policing that will Hoover up everything from constitutional debates to historical texts. The mother’s grief becomes the justification for a digital censorship bureaucracy.
Case three: a teenager’s suicide linked to cyberbullying. The platform is accused of not doing enough. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: no algorithm, no panic button, no duty of care can replace a parent’s supervision, a teacher’s attention, or a friend’s conversation. We want tech to be a nanny, but we refuse to be parents.
Case four: a defamation suit over a false news story. The plaintiff wins, but the damages are crippling for the small blogger who shared it. The case is about ‘harm’, but the real damage is to the open internet. When every citizen is a potential defendant, the wise will say nothing at all.
These cases are all well-intentioned. They are fuelled by real suffering and justified anger. But the road to digital serfdom is paved with good intentions. The Founding Fathers knew this. The framers of our unwritten constitution knew this. They feared the tyranny of the majority, and they feared the tyranny of the government. Now we face a new tyranny: the tyranny of the algorithm, overseen by regulators who have never run a small business, created an online community, or understood the messy, glorious chaos of free expression.
Mark my words: the outcome of these cases will not be a safer internet. It will be a blander one. We will trade our liberty for a temporary sense of protection. And the Romans did this too: they gave up their republic for bread and circuses. We are giving up our digital republic for safety.
But safety from what? From offence, from bad ideas, from the ugly parts of human nature. The internet is a mirror, and if you do not like what you see, you do not smash the mirror; you fix your face. These cases will not solve the underlying problems of social media: the addiction, the loneliness, the tribalism. They will merely slap a new coat of regulation over the rot.
I say this not as a defender of tech giants. They deserve scorn for their greed and negligence. But I say it as a defender of the ancient principle that the government should not be the arbiter of truth. The four cases are a warning: we are about to cross a line. Once you let the state decide what can be said online, you will never get that power back.
So brace yourself for the verdicts. And when they come, remember: every time you applaud a new law that silences a troll, you are also silencing the crank, the heretic, the satirist, the prophet. That is the price of ‘safety’. Whether it is worth paying is for history to judge. But history is seldom kind to those who trade their voice for a shekel of protection.








