Ballentine v. Meta Platforms, Inc.
Issue
In *Ballentine v. Meta Platforms, Inc.*, Meta argues that a pro se plaintiff's racial discrimination claims arising from the disablement of his Facebook account must be dismissed because the court lacks personal jurisdiction over Meta, Section 230 categorically immunizes account-enforcement decisions from civil rights liability, and the federal statutes invoked — §§ 1981, 1982, 1983, and 1985(3) — each fail on independent pleading grounds. The case raises the unresolved question of whether Section 230's publisher immunity extends not merely to decisions about what content to remove, but to claims that the *selection of whose account to disable* was made on racially discriminatory grounds.
What Happened
Meta filed this Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss Ballentine's First Amended Complaint in the Middle District of Florida, seeking dismissal with prejudice and without leave to amend. The motion presents five independent grounds for dismissal, each targeted at a separate claim or jurisdictional basis. On personal jurisdiction, Meta argues that platform accessibility in Florida and the plaintiff's in-state injury do not establish the constitutionally required contacts under *Daimler* and *Walden*. On Section 230, Meta contends that disabling an account is a quintessential publisher decision immunized regardless of how the underlying claim is labeled. On the civil rights claims, Meta argues that Plaintiff's comparator evidence is too thin to survive *Iqbal* plausibility review, that mandatory NCMEC reporting does not make Meta a state actor under *Lugar*, and that binding Eleventh Circuit precedent in *Jimenez v. WellStar* forecloses using §§ 1981 and 1982 as predicate rights for a § 1985(3) private-actor conspiracy claim.
Why It Matters
This motion is a case study in how major platforms structure layered Rule 12(b) dismissal arguments to resolve civil rights platform-liability cases before any contested legal question reaches the merits. Meta's maximalist Section 230 position — asserted without engaging whether discriminatory *selection* of enforcement targets constitutes the platform's own conduct rather than editorial judgment — signals that the industry regards that gap in doctrine as a vulnerability worth avoiding rather than litigating. If the court dismisses on personal jurisdiction or any of the threshold pleading grounds, the harder Section 230 question goes unanswered; a ruling that reaches it would fill a genuine gap in Eleventh Circuit law. The motion also highlights a growing tension between the *Walden*-based jurisdictional framework and platforms' geographically targeted commercial advertising activity — a pressure point that will likely recur as more plaintiffs allege platform discrimination tied to monetized business use.
Related Filings
Other proceedings in the same litigation tracked by this monitor.
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