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The fact she was using the thing they paid for and continue to pay for, the town's streets, to ends they don't support was the essence of the argument against her. She certainly wouldn't have had trespassing charges levied against her if she hadn't been proselytizing. It costs marginally more to store a piece of user-generated content but the principle is the same - both people are making use of resources a company owns but has made available to the public to do something that is not only legal but a constitutionally guaranteed right.
I'unno, there's probably more wiggle room involved in these cases, as you don't generally enter explicit contract to use a street or whatev'. Pointedly, you
do with stuff like facebook. The companies in question very much have limits -- and up front ones, for that matter, even if bloody no one reads them -- on what sort of access they allow and how you're allowed to use that access. You're going to be fucking with contract law as much or more than civil/speech law if you're going to override how they host material. Probably a host of freedom of association issues, too, since however open the gates are on these websites they're still much closer to a gated community than a public facing street (well, the parts that aren't actually public facing, anyway).
Even then there totally are realistic ways to express your 1st et al without them... just not to as wide an audience.
... still, part of me finds turning stuff like facebook public to be sorta' hilarious. Can anyone here imagine how things would change with a legislative mandate to enforce stuff like hate speech protections and copyright versus functionally lackadaisical private administration? I'd imagine shit like safe harbor stops applying for something government ran, and the clusterfuck that would ensue from stuff like
that would probably be tumblr nipple-ban tier.
As someone that doesn't really use the stuff the shitshow would be incredible to watch from the sidelines.
E: Honestly, now that I'm thinking about it why the hell do we seem to think making these services public would entail a better end result to begin with? Public utilities cut people off for misuse all the time and are under threat of much bigger sticks when it comes to policy enforcement, and then there's the cash et al side of things. Wouldn't it be some fuckhuge massive problem to be running a public utility that's funding itself off ads and whatnot? Would you be running this stuff with taxpayer money instead?
E2: christ on a pogo stick all I can think of when I think public facebook now is commercialized NSA data mining operation
E3: which, I mean. At least then it'd be paying for itself? Maybe it would actually be an improvement...
E4: Alright, okay. That's our plan. We give social media over to the NSA. There's no way this can end horribly.