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How Alice and Section 230 Became Twin Pillars of Tech Sector Immunity

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How Alice and Section 230 Became Twin Pillars of Tech Sector Immunity

How Alice and Section 230 Became Twin Pillars of Tech Sector Immunity

I. Introduction: Two Doctrines, One Structural Effect

Over the past decade, two legal doctrines have quietly but profoundly reshaped the relationship between the public and the technology industry. The first is the Supreme Court’s 2014 decision in Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank, which transformed patent eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101. The second is 47 U.S.C. § 230, the federal statute that immunizes online platforms from liability for user‑generated content.

They arise from different bodies of law — patent and tort — but they share a common structural effect: they insulate large technology companies from external claims, whether those claims seek to impose liability or secure patent rights.

II. The Alice Framework: A Two‑Step Test That Became a Barrier

The Alice decision introduced a two‑step test for patent eligibility:

  1. Abstract idea analysis — Determine whether the claim is directed to an abstract idea.
  2. Inventive concept analysis — Determine whether the claim contains “significantly more” than the abstract idea.

In theory, this test was meant to prevent monopolization of fundamental concepts. In practice, it has become a powerful exclusionary tool for entrenched technology companies.

A. Why Alice favors incumbents

  • Incumbents already control the infrastructure. When a startup claims an improvement to data processing, content delivery, or user interaction, courts often characterize the claim as “abstract,” because the underlying computational environment is already dominated by existing platforms.
  • The “inventive concept” requirement is interpreted narrowly. Improvements that matter in practice — better latency, more efficient memory use, improved user interfaces — are routinely dismissed as “generic computer implementation.”
  • Tech companies use Alice offensively. In litigation, large platforms invoke Alice at the pleading stage to invalidate patents before discovery, dramatically reducing exposure.

B. The result: a de facto exclusion zone

The combined effect is that entire categories of innovation adjacent to software, data, and online platforms are now extremely difficult for outsiders to patent, while incumbents continue to file and obtain patents in adjacent areas where they can frame the invention as a technical improvement to their own proprietary systems.

III. Section 230: The Tort‑Liability Counterpart

Section 230(c)(1) provides that online platforms are not treated as the “publisher or speaker” of user‑generated content. Courts have interpreted this broadly, creating a sweeping immunity from tort liability.

A. How Section 230 parallels Alice

  • Both doctrines create early‑stage dismissal tools. Section 230 allows platforms to defeat tort claims at the motion‑to‑dismiss stage; Alice allows them to defeat patent claims at the Rule 12 stage.
  • Both doctrines shift risk away from tech companies. Section 230 shifts the risk of harmful user conduct; Alice shifts the risk of disruptive outsider innovation.
  • Both doctrines create structural asymmetry. Outsiders bear the burden — victims of tortious online conduct in the Section 230 context, and independent inventors in the Alice context.

B. The combined effect: immunity from liability and immunity from competition

Section 230 protects platforms from being sued for what users do. Alice protects platforms from being disrupted by what outsiders invent.

Together, they form a dual shield: one against tort claims, one against patent claims.

IV. How Alice Reshaped Innovation Incentives

A. Outsiders face a steep eligibility cliff

Independent inventors and small companies often cannot frame their inventions as “technical improvements to computer functionality” because they do not control the underlying platform. Courts therefore treat their claims as abstract.

B. Incumbents can frame improvements as technical

Large tech companies can describe incremental improvements as:

  • “enhanced distributed database architecture,”
  • “improved parallel processing,”
  • “optimized content‑delivery pipelines,”

and courts often accept these as “significantly more” under step two.

C. The public loses access to patent protection

The public’s ability to secure patents in software‑adjacent fields has shrunk dramatically. This is not because the inventions lack novelty or utility, but because the doctrinal framing under Alice structurally favors incumbents.

V. The Policy Parallel: Immunity as a Market‑Shaping Force

Both doctrines were originally justified as necessary to protect innovation and free expression. But their long‑term effect has been to centralize power:

  • Section 230 centralizes control over online speech.
  • Alice centralizes control over software‑adjacent innovation.

In both cases, the public’s ability to assert claims — whether tort claims or patent claims — has been severely curtailed.

VI. Conclusion: The Rise of Structural Immunities in Tech Law

Alice and Section 230 operate in different doctrinal universes, but they share a common structural logic: they shield dominant technology companies from external claims that could impose liability or disrupt their market position.

For inventors, entrepreneurs, and the public, the result is the same: a legal landscape in which the most powerful actors enjoy both tort immunity and patent‑eligibility immunity, while outsiders face steep barriers to asserting rights.

If you need help regarding your intellectual property, your business, your products and services, or other related intellectual property or business matters, contact Ahmadshahi Law Offices today and get an initial consultation.

Michael M. Ahmadshahi concentrates his practice on patents, trademarks copyrights, trade secrets and other intellectual property and business law. Call us toll free at (800) 747-6081 or direct at (949) 556-8800 or email mahmadshahi@mmaiplaw.com and let us help you with your IP and business matters.

attorney Michael Ahmadshahi

Mr. Ahmadshahi’s area of practice is Intellectual Property Laws including Patent Prosecution and Litigation, Trademarks, Copyrights, Unfair Business Practices, and Business Litigation. He is also an entrepreneur and an inventor.

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