Featured

Ken Paxton Wins Temporary Restraining Order Against Discord

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) announced that he has secured an emergency Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) against Discord, requiring the company to immediately change several default account settings for Texas Users and halt certain safety-related marketing claims while litigation proceeds.

The court order was signed the same day Paxton's office filed a lawsuit against Discord, alleging the platform exposed children to online predators while misleading parents and consumers about its safety practices.

"Discord designed a predator's paradise, switched off the safeguards by default, and looked Texas parents in the eye and called it safe," said AG Paxton. "That is not negligence. That is evil dressed up as a safety policy."

Under the TRO, Discord must immediately place four key account settings into their most protective configurations for Texas users. The order requires the platform to block sensitive content rather than merely blur it, disable friend requests from "Everyone," turn off direct-message social permissions, and set spam filtering to "Filter All."

"A court ordered Discord to stop, and I will pursue this company with the full unrelenting force of the law until every child in Texas is protected from the sick predators it invited in," said Paxton.

According to Paxton's office, these settings affect some of the most common ways predators contact children online. The lawsuit alleges that Discord previously left those protections disabled by default, requiring users and parents to manually activate them.

The court order also prohibits Discord from representing that the platform is "safe by design," "safe by default," and that safety is "at the core of everything" the company does or that it maintains a "zero-tolerance" policy if those claims conflict with the platform's actual operations.

Additionally, Discord must preserve moderation and enforcement records, suspend the automatic deletion of user violation records after 90 days, and provide a verified report within 14 days detailing its default settings, workforce safety staffing levels, and information regarding users who return after being banned.

The lawsuit remains pending as Texas seeks additional remedies and enforcement measures against the company.

Raeylee Barefield

Raeylee Barefield is a Legislative Correspondent based in Austin, Texas, specializing in state government and public policy. With one year of reporting under her belt, she covers legislative developments, committee hearings, and policy debates. She has been cited by Texas Politics and Big Energy for her coverage and analysis of legislative and regulatory issues. Her reporting typically focuses on Public policy, Stare government, environmental policy, and energy regulation. To contact her, please reach out at Raeylee@dnm.news

Recent Posts

Ken Paxton Says He Supports IVF Procedures, Unlike Rest of Texas GOP

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Thursday he is a "strong supporter" of in-vitro fertilization,…

2 days ago

Al Green Marks Juneteenth in Galveston With a Call for Reparations

Representative Al Green (D-TX) stood in Galveston on Juneteenth, the very city where enslaved Texans…

2 days ago

Iran Shuts Down Strait of Hormuz Following Continued Israeli Strikes in Lebanon

Iran once again closed the Strait of Hormuz today, suspending the 60-day negotiation period following…

2 days ago

Texas Universities Receive USDA Funding to Combat New World Screwworm

Governor Greg Abbott announced that several Texas universities and research institutions will receive funding through…

2 days ago

John Cornyn Leads Senate Resolution Honoring Juneteenth

U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R) has introduced a bipartisan Senate resolution commemorating Juneteenth National Independence…

2 days ago

LONESTAR — 6.19.2026 — Oil Prices Lower Than $80 Per Barrel — Cornyn's PAID OFF Act Advances — and More...

Oil Prices Drop Below $80 Per Barrel, Following the Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz…

2 days ago