I'm finishing serializing my forthcoming Emory Law Journal article titled Addiction to Constitutionally Protected Activity: Speech, Press, and Religion. In my earlier posts, I argued that concerns about psychological addiction can't justify restrictions that interfere with behavior presumptively protected by the Free Exercise Clause. I then turned to arguing that these concerns likewise generally can't justify restrictions with behavior presumptively protected by the Free Speech or Press Clause. Today, I close with the question whether some such restrictions may be upheld when focused on speech that reaches minors.
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Perhaps because of the First Amendment concerns mentioned above, much of the discussion of regulating addictive technologies has focused on regulating use by minors, n