> I get a ton of email, so I use a special filtering service that routes my mail to different boxes -- including sending certain PR emails straight into the trash. As I read this bill, that would no longer be allowed in Texas.<p>> And this includes monetary fines. So the PR folks who are mad that I never read their emails could sue for $10 for each message "unlawfully impeded" and $25,000 for each day that their emails are so impeded as well.<p>To my understanding, the bill isn't restricting what an individual user can choose to block for themself. Like how a postal service being a common carrier doesn't mean you're not allowed to throw out junk mail you receive.<p>It clarifies as follows for user pages which can be a bit of an in-between case:<p>> (b) This chapter may not be construed to prohibit or restrict a social media platform from authorizing or facilitating a user's ability to censor specific expression on the user's platform or page at the request of that user.